Marathon to match multitudes of roundballersBy MIKE KRAUSSIn the style of UCLA, the college facultywill meet the University coaching staffduring the Maroon Marathon at thefieldhouse tomorrow. Larry Hawkins andMike Claffey will put the faculty in leaguewith the Walton Gang. Among Claffey'ssponsors is Gaylord Donnelly, chairman ofthe Board of Trustees.Lorna Straus, Dean of Students, headorganizer, water carrier, and faculty coachwhipped her team into shape. Joe “TheShot” Stampf has been working with the; coaches all week, but the oddsmakers stilllist the coaches as 15 point underdogs.Faculty favorites are Steve Moore, Arlin“Darlin” Larson, Ed “Elbows” Turkingtonand “Stretch” Sally. They will be backed upby Ed “Da Dunker” Deutsch, Jud “Fix’em”Hixon, and Ralph “Multi” Medley.Erich Segal, author of Love Story wniparticipate in the Maroon Marathon onSaturday at 4 pm. Segal is working out at thefield house in preparation for the BostonMarathon. For each mile he runs indoorsSaturday, the Order of the C will attempt toraise $1,000 toward construction of the newrecreational swimming pool via the MaroonMarathon.The purpose of the Marathon is to raisemoney for the initial funding of a newrecreational swimming facility for thevacant field north of Bartlett gym. Theestimated cost of the new pool is $1.6 million.When the pool is completed it will createadditional locker facilities for Bartlett aswell as account for the remodeling of theBartlett locker-room. The pool would be the first new athleticrecreational facility constructed on campussince the fieldhouse was “completed” in1931. Both the pool in Bartlett, constructed in1902, and the one in Ida Noyes are sorelyinadequate in meeting the needs of theUniversity. The acute need for newrecreational facilities will be increased whenthe University sells Boucher Hall. With thesale of Boucher the campus will lose a pool,an outmoded gymnasium, handball courts,and fencing and exercise rooms.With the construction of the new pool, andremodeling of the fieldhouse, womens PEcould be moved into the vicinity of themajority of athletic facilties. The time hascome when women should be allowed equalopportunity to use athletic facilities. Theyshould not have to walk a mile merely to runindoors at the fieldhouse nor to practicegymnastics at Bartlett or to work out on thenew Stagg field. Women should not have todress in toilets as in the fieldhouse, noroutdoors as on Stagg field or in 5’ x 9’ closetsas in Bartlett. Facilities constructed at theturn of the century simply did not provide forwomen.In an interview University vice-presidentO’Connell indicated that many newrecreational facilities are planned for thecampus. Besides the pool and remodeling ofthe fieldhouse, enclosed toilets on the newStagg field, a new wing for Ida Noyes, anindoor skating facility, bowling alleys andimproved dormitory facilities are planned.The problem, O’Connell emphasized, ismoney. O’Connell praised the Marathon and inaddition is sponsoring housing directorEdward Turkington for $1 per minute.O’Connell is not the only top level ad¬ministrator backing the MarathonProvost John T Wilson has pledged $1 perminute on behalf of the plaving of VicePresident of the University Michael Claffey.Vice president of planning Walter Walker issponsoring Norval Brown, a varsity star, for$1 per point. Roger Hildebrand, Dean of theCollege, has pledged $1 per minute for LarryHawkins, a faculty standout. Linda Thoren,Assistant Vice President in Development,is another Claffey backer at $1 per minute.Assistant Dean of Students James Vice andCedrick Chernick Assistant Vice President,will be debating Mitchell Glass and RAPeditor Joe Morris Saturday night at 9 pm inMandei Hall. They have pledged half of theirgate receipts to the Marathon. Admission is75*.Milton Friedman pledged $1 per minutetoward a Business school faculty member orstudent. Thus, Jimmy Clark, a member ofthe Zephyrs, will be backed by Friedman.A A Kiss and the plant department hascontributed $1 per minute on behalf of thecoaches. The Maroon and the GraduateOrder of the “C” have each pledged $100 tothe Marathon. Deans Metcalf, Davidson andKruskal are each contributors to theMarathon.Wilson McDermut, Myron Rumkin, RobertGraves, Walter Fackler and Harry Robertsand the Book Nook in the 55th St Plaza areall large donors to the Marathon. Anyone wishing to make a contribution tothe Marathon may do so simply by sending acheck to:C/ O Maroon Marathon5640 S UniversityChicago, IllPlease make checks payable to: TheUniversity of Chicago MarathonThe opening tipoff of the Marathon willcome at 7 pm Friday night when the varsitysw'im team faces the Swim Club Action willproceed throughout the night at thefieldhouse.At 1 pm Saturday afternoon the court willbe cleared for the Maroon vs RAP gameFollowing the RAP massacre and the facultygame, the Varsity Basketball team willdefend their 15-4 record against the in¬tramural champions “The Zephyrs”.Jonathan Kleinbart. President Levi’sassistant, has pledged $1 per minute forSherwin “Wildman” Waldman. With seniorWaldman at the controls the Varsity arelisted as 10 point favorites.Other contests include the Backrow vs theIM Refs, immediately following the Zephyrgame. When the Backrow is tapped into theground, radio station WHPK led by thelovable Skip Landt will face the Women'sVarsity. The girls are 5 points favorites overLandt’s boys.Play will continue around the clock untilsometime Sunday afternoon when allstarsfrom Pierce Tower will take on allstars fromWoodward Court. The Marathon will not enduntil one allstar team cannot field fourplayers.licago MaroonThe University of Chicago Friday, March 30, 1973Levi announces fund-raising driveThe following is an excerpt from a recent interviewwith President Levi held with Rap news editor JoeMorris and Maroon editor-in-chief Lisa Capell. Due tospace limitation the remainder of Levi's State of theUniversity adress will not appear in the Maroon. Forthose who wish to read it, contact the Maroon.What do you think your trip to China will ac¬complish?I am not sure that it will accomplish very much. Itwould be very nice that if as a result of the trip wecould arrange an exchange of scholars from China andfrom the University of Chicago. Whether that will bepossible or not I don’t know.At the four institutions that you are planning to visitdo you know if there are a significant number of UCalumni as faculty or administrators?I am told there are about a hundred University ofChicago alumni at various positions. I think the vice-chancellor of the University of Peking is an alumnusand the vice-president of the organization which is thecomparable to our National Academy of Sciences, isan alumnus of the University of Chicago.Mr Levi, in your address to the faculty you reportedthat there is a 1.5 percent decrease in expenditures, adramatic change in comparison to the 165 percentincrease in the ten years preceding 1971. Why was theshift so dramatic and so sudden?One obvious reason is that as a result of the FordChallenge Grant and the successful campaign for $160million we had $25 million added from the ChallengeGrant to be used basically to upgrade the quality of theUniversity. It was used to support the centralacademic budget. The care which we lavished on thatparticular fund is indicated by the fact that eventhough it started coming to us in 1965 or thereabouts itis only this year that it is being used up.The fact that it is beginning to run out presents agreat perturbation to the academic budget; it meansthat $3.5 to $5 million previously available forunrestricted central expenditures is now gone. Weknew that we would eventually be in thissituation—the $160 million drive was the first leg of atwo leg campaign and the problem now is if we can gointo that second leg and raise $250 million.How do you propose going about doing this?We propose to beg.The sctuiiu point ia that tiicie hcia been a decline infederal funds or a change in the way they come to the LEVI: President Levi makes his annual appearancebefore the campus media.University or to students. The third reason is thatcosts have escalated despite our efforts. Newbuildings, which are essential for the University,carry with them additional cost; the costs of main¬tenance for example, are extremely high. When wesay that, it doesn’t mean we are not extremely ior-tunate to have these new buildings even though thisdoes mean that the budget has to carry this additionalload.What is your reaction to individual fund-raisingefforts currently underway for specific facilities? Doyou think the money can be used in better ways?It is a complicated question yet I have a point ofview on it. I think the main problem in money-raisingis that it is hard to raise money. And the main dif¬ficulty is that foundations and individuals don’t reallygive you the money you’d like to get.You are assuming that the money has been raisedand then we come to other question if it could havebeen used fui some ulliei purpose. I’m afraid that arealistic problem isn’t of that sort The realistic problem is whether the funds can be raised.Speaking directly to the athletic facilities, thereisn’t any doubt that the University’s facilities areinadequate, and have been inadequate for a long time,and I think there also isn’t any doubt that it is verydifficult to raise funds for athletic facilities.There are probably many reasons for that. I don'tthink the reason can be that people don’t believe thatthe University is interested in athletic facilities,because, as we all know, the present facilities areoverused and inadequate and we have a very largeprogram of a kind which ought to appeal to people whoare interested in athletics at this kind of a university.I think that some people would say if you are soconcerned about the maintenance of a high qualityintellectual place then you ought not be trying to raisemoney for athletic facilities. I don’t buy that. I thinkthese facilities would add importantly to life at theUniversity. But I think it is perhaps one factor in theapparent indifference of possible donors forsomething of that kind.But there are other areas of this sort, for example Ithink that is very strange that a University of this typedoesn’t have an adequate facility for a studenttheater. And over the years I have talked to I don'tknow how many people who are seriously interested inthe theater and who have told me that it is outrageousthat the University doesn’t have adequate facility fora student theater, and I remember telling one suchperson some years ago that the answer was verysimple: that as far as I could tell, people interested intheater were not the kind of people who were in¬terested in giving money for it.For a long time, namely something like 50 years, theUniversity has had completely inadequate facilitiesfor the art department. Again the world is full ofcollectors of art who thought it was outrageous that wedidn’t have an art gallery. But it was only recentlythat the University was able to raise funds for that.I think there are these kinds of areas where you finda great deal of interest but for some reason or other, Idon’t know what it is, but it is very difficult for us toraise money in those areas. And I would say the samething about the athletic facilities.And so my view on the matter is that if one couldraise a considerable amount of money for athleticIctcihties, I wuulu be delighted.continued on page three.LCampbell on student government: good and badBy TOM CAMPBELLThe recent appearance in the campusmedia of challenges to SG’s continuedexistence, demands of dissolution or reform,and pleas that SG do “something, anything”evoke two responses. The first is a com¬forting sense of historic fulfillment, for itreally wouldn’t be a valid academic year atthe University without at least one crisis inSG. This year, we have met our historicmandate with honors.The second response is to question yet oncemore just what SG-or any govemment-issupposed to do. Let’s start with a formulationwell known at least to triweekly readers ofNewsweek. The purpose of government is tooerform those functions beneficial to thextpulace which could not be as effeciently♦erformed by the people individually. Thisnay be specified into three issues for thecase of SG‘ 1) funding extracurricularorganizations; 2) representing in a formalmanner the student body; and 3) renderingservices to students.1.Funding extracurricular organizationsThis function is currently managed by acommittee of SG, the committee onrecognized student organizations (CORSO).In my idealistic days, I proposed that this committee might be bound in the spending ofat least 50% of its budget by the directlyexpressed preference of students, through anannual vote of priorities. Frankly, this ideawent over only with a few libertarians oncampus and was voted down by SG.Even this plan recognized the need forGADFLYsome committee structure, however; it hasnot been disputed that a government canperform this allocative function moreadequately than the students individually.The committee members, nevertheless,must be representative and competent. Thisyear, by happy circumstance, they are. Butbecause this needn’t always be so, we oughtto substitute the selection of these committeemembers by the SG (with the inevitableaccompaniment of suspicion of favoritism)by a campus-wide election, at least for amajority of the members. They would thencertainly be more representative; and, as for competence, the election of FSACCSLmembers by the campus as a whole arguesstrongly that the general populace is as ableto judge this quality as a majority caucus ofthe SG Assembly.2.Formal representationThe comparative advantage of studentgovernment relative to the private studentsector is perhaps clearest in the realm offormal representation. This was workedbetter off than on campus. For instance, lastOctober, SG was able, as the official and non¬partisan representative of the student bodyto arrange for election officials to registernew voters right on our campus. I believethat this was the single most useful activitywe have undertaken for the student boyd,with over eight hundred new voters as aresult. The Board of Election Commissionerswas not easy to convince, and I doubt that itwould have accepted the invitation of anyless official sounding organization.Other cases include the role SG played inthe mini-strike of last May. Together with theOmbudsman’s office, we were able to serveas an official, removed tallier for the strikereferendum and as a public forum to debatethe merits and demerits of a strike in arepresentative context.Recall, however, that the strike initative did not come from SG. We served a functionwhen the campus required it we did notimpose a schedule of political activism onour own. This is very much in SG’s favor, fora super-politicized student assembly faroutstripping its constituency in militancydoes that constituency unqualified harm.Advocates of SG’s doing “something,anything” ought to be grateful instead thatour excesses were notin the direction mostoften observed on other campuses.3.ServicesThe routine services of SG have expectedlyreceived the least publicity, but they havebeen administered very regularly. SG has anemergency loan fund open to all students(up to $25 with two weeks to repay) that hasbeen in almost continual use-thanks forwhich are due solely to the diligence of Mr.Calvin Hayes, the SG Treasurer. We haveassisted other student organizations to bringspeakers and entertainment to campus; wehave enabled the Reynolds Club Co-op toexpand its record department into classicalstock, underselling every major competitorinHyde Park. A new service this quarter is a20% discount off regular charge for anystudents wishing to rent a Hertz car. And thecontinued on page six®it qnfoersitj) of QhicagoROCKEFELLER MEMORIAL CHAPEL59TH STREET AND WOODLAWN AVENUE . CHICAGO, ILLINOISX 8. Bad)JVlas® in jB JVLtttorTHE ROCKEFELLER CHAPEL CHOIRAND ORCHESTRA (30 Players)RICHARD VIKSTROM, DirectorELLIOTT GOLUB, ConcertmasterSUSAN NALBACH LUTZ, Soprano GERALD SCOTT, TenorPHYLLIS UNOSAWA, Contralto MONROE OLSON, BassLARRY MENDES, ContinuoSUNDAY • APRIL 15,1973 • 3:30 P.M.Tickets: Reserved $5.00 Chancel Seating $4.50General Admission $4.00 U. of C. Students $2.50Group rales available upon request to Chapel Music OfficeOn Sale: Reynolds Club Desk, 57th Street and University AvenueCooley’s Corner, 5211 Harper AvenueWoodworth’s Bookstore, 1311 East 57th StreetMail Orders to: Chapel Music Office, 59th Street and Woodlawn Avenue, Chicago 60637Please make checks payable io The University of Chicago and enclose stamped, self-addressed envelope «am tryingto bribe youwithuncertainty,withdanger,withdefeat.99 ...jorgeluisborgesThat’s mostly what you’llfind if you commit yourlife to the millions in theThird World who cry outin the hunger of theirhearts. That...and fulfill¬ment too...with theCOLUMBANFATHERSOver 1,000 Catholic mission¬ary nriests at work mainly inthe developing nations.We’ve been called by manynames - “foreign dogs" ..."hope-makers" . .. "capital¬ist criminals”...“hard-nosedrealists”...Read the whole story in ournewtjitq |.i ri 16-PAGEr xl Hi Hi BOOKLET— — — — — — -| Columban Fathers CM !j St. Columbans, Neb. 6805EJI Please send me a copy of youjI booklet. No strings.II| NameAddressCityIIIIII^College Class jState!2 - The Chicago Maroon - Friday, March 30, 1973r. ri:o3:t/if;£<t):tr!v • u >;',M .(•>The president's function "is to worry ifcontinued from page oneI would not say to myself seriously, well wouldn’t ithave been better if that money have come in forscholarships even though I would place at the top ofour list a large fund for scholarships.In regards to where funds would come from, fromwhom would the University “beg”?The University of Chicago is a prominent institutionin the city of Chicago, it is a prominent institution inthe Middle West, nationally and internationally, Ithink generally speaking the University has had toraise its money from individuals who are mostknowledgeable about higher education. It is that kindof giving which has made the University possible andkept it strong. We do raise money from alumni but wealso raise money from knowledgeable donors all overthe country.To knowledgeable persons around the country thereputation of this University is very high. One has torealize that speaking from within the University isn’talways the best position for one to determine whetherthat’s true or not, but so far as we can tell theUniversity is recognized and has been recognized asone of the top quality private universities in thecountry, perhaps in some ways the prototype of a highquality private university. However, the University isnot run for public relations.Do you feel we should sell, meaning publicize, the academic standing of this University?I think we have to keep talking about the Universitycontinually and I think that among knowledgeablefoundations and donors this is well known, and indeedit results certainly, in gifts to the University which if itwere a different kind of place it would not havereceived.The serious and terrible question which theUniversity faces but which is not just a problem forthe University of Chicago but for the country, andhigher education as a whole, is whether in the presentsituation people care enough about high qualityprivate education? If they don’t of course there isgoing to be a period of extreme difficulty....People who give money to universities are likelyto be people who give money to many good causes sothey must feel they are being pursued by the world....I find it incredible...that high school students onthe North Shore may think that the University ofChicago is really the Circle Campus and that highschool students around the country may think this is amunicipal college or university and really know verylittle of the extraordinary history of this place, but Idon’t think we should be surprised about ignorance. Ifeel we should be grateful for the little amount ofwisdom there is around the country.Mr Levi do you have a prognosis for the financialstate of the University in a year or two?IF YOU HAVE AN UNUSUAL TALENTYOU HAVE WHAT IT TAKES TO BE ABUDWEISER WORLD CHAMPION!EARN THISTERRIFIC PATCH,7"X6", COLORFUL,WASHABLE, WITHSPACE FOR WRITINGIN YOUR SPECIALTY.Breathe easy, Earthlings. Budweiser isdoing something about the current short¬age of world champions in the worldBudweiser is sanctioning five foolishevents in which world-record setterscan win prestige plus a handsomepatch.In addition to the thrilling BUDCAN TOTE, there are four others.Get details at your favorite beerstore where you see the gaudy “Bud¬weiser World Championship” display!Do one, beat the record, tell us about it ona postcard and get your marker (>en readyfor inscribing your particular specialty beneath where it says “World Champion.” 191*** *******This fine young man isdoing the BUDWEISERCAN TOTE. So shouldyou. Just tote a recordnumber of empty Budcans, balanced atop oneanother, without mishap,for a distance of 25 feetand earn a dandyBudweiser WorldChampion patch.Record to beatis 4. (You laugh?)(Maybe you've defected thatthis is not an official, rigid-rules“contest.” But it is a lot of fun,even if you can't break the^ records. You can, though,' can’t you?)TO GET YOUR BUDWEISERWORLD CHAMPION PATCH(EVEN IF YOU DON’T SET ARECORD), JUST WRITE YOURNAME, ADDRESS AND WHATYOU DID ON A POSTCARD.SENDIT TO I have to be optimistic. I think we’ll go through agreat agony and effort and that we will raise themoney....The$160 million drive’s success is one reason whyone should be optimistic about the future because itwas the largest single fund-raising drive that anyuniversity had ever put on up to that time....The only problem with a drive of this kind is thatthere is a cycle of energy. You can’t have a $160million drive every three years. If you look at thehistory of the University you will find that we havenever had one fund-raising drive follow another byless than 10 year interval. So when we talk of startingone right now the period of time is a little short toregroup and go back to what one hopes are pools offinancial aid.When will the drive for the $250 million begin?It is under serious discussion now and I don’t knowwhat the answer will be but I assume it will have to besoon.But there is another problem and that is foundationshave become interested in all kinds of social causesand that they have also assumed, many of them, thatthe Federal Government would pick up the support ofmany areas of quality higher education. So thefoundations felt they could withdraw from those areasand this does represent a special kind of problem...Socontinued on pope fourDO YOU HAVETIRED FEET?It only costs $677/mo*More to rideWhy walk when you can ride. The FIAT 8S0 SPIDERgives you economical transportation, great styling, aLOW PRICE, and fresh air too. Now you too can owna fancy sports car, it's easier than you think. All ittakes is a short ride into the Loop to LOEBER, theywill show you how easy it really is.*36 monthly payments, APR 9031 cash price of S2650,S530 cash or trade, deferred payment price of $2,437 56I FIATLOEBER IMPORTERSNO PROOF OF PURCHASE REQUIRED OFFER VOID WHERE PROHIBITED Br LAW AUOW FOUR WEEKS FOR DELIVERY OFFER EXPIRES DECEMBER 31 1*73.ANHEUSER BUSCH INC • SI LOUIS MIN. CLARK IN THE LOOPCHICAGO 944-050073-Cl (450 lines)Friday, March 30, 1973-The Chicago Maroon - 3Continual teaching-reseacontinued from page threethat program after program where there had beenfoundation support, foundations withdrew on thetheory that the Federal Government was picking upthese areas of need. Now the Federal Government haswithdrawn from those areas, but the foundations havenot come back.What is your opinion of students, over the long term,bearing the costs of instruction?Borrowing money for education isn’t really a newidea. The new idea which I think you are referring to isthe idea of paying back over a long period of time onthe basis of the income which the student makes. If thestudent becomes fat and forty and wealthy then he willhave to pay a great deal more than the emaciatedscholar who is underpaid. And the assumption is thatby treating alumni as groups, the ones who made ithelp take care of the ones who didn’t.This is really a kind of insurance scheme sometimesknown as the Yale plan and at the University ofChicago when we feel good about it we say it all camefrom Milton Friedman.I think the problem is that costs of education aresuch that a student completely on that program ofborrowing, or a family unit completely on thatprogram, would find itself with an enormous debt if allthe costs were placed upon them. ...I just have somequestion as to whether this is a workable idea.The world would be a different place if state in¬stitutions would charge fees comparable to their costs.But of course they don’t. And if the University’s tuitionwere higher and it had larger scholarships then youwould get a structure in which those who could affordto pay more would pay more and those who could payFriday/ March 30DANCE: Folk dancing, 50c, Ida Noyes, 8 pm.EAT, DRINK AND BE MERRY: The Ida Noyes coffeehouse rides again, 8 12 pm.MARATHON: Today is the day you've all been waiting for(haha) astheUC basketball marathon, featuring the Zephyrsvs the Varsity as well as other sundry characters, begins.Information on teams, sponsors, when, where, why andwhodunnit available at the f ieldhouse, x34692 The Marathonitself starts at 7 pm.CONCERT: Indian sitar music, Ida Noyes, 8 pm.LECTURE: "Courage, heroism and the Holocaust, 1648,1794 and 1943," Professor Arcadius Kahan, Hillel House,5715 S Woodlawn, 8:30 pm.CONCERT 2: The Quartetto Italiano at Mandel Hall. Forinformation and tickets call 753 2612. Concert starts at 8:30pm.FILM: "Bananas," DOC, Cobb. If you like comedy—orWoody Allen—you'll like this. $1,6:30, 8:30 and 10:30 pm.COFFEEHOUSE PLUS: "Poetry recitation" by theChicago traffic violations department, Ida Noyes, 8:30 pm.LECTURE: "Intrasonic meditation," B K Avenell, BlueGargoyle, 7:30 pm.WATER POLO: UC Swim Club and everyone invited,Boucher, 6 7:30 pm.COLLOQUIUM: " Proba I istic -oodeU in evolution,"Rochester prof David Raup, HGS ’ttrrr'j:30 pm. Refreshments at 3 pm.REVIEW: English professor Jerome McGann reviews TheSpider's Strategem.the film Bertolucci made before LastTango in Paris, WHPK FM, 8 am and 8 pm.OPEN HOUSE: University theater open house. Anyoneinterested is invited to come and rap with theater directorNicholas Rudall and technical director Charles Jenkins,Reynolds club theater, 4 5:30 pm.COFFEE HOUSE: Gay coffee house, Blue Gargoyle, 8 12pm.LECTURE: "Transfection of B Subtil is with single strandedSTP 1 DNA and correction of mismatched DNA strands,"with Gunther Klotzof the Max Planck Institute of MolecularGenetics of Berlin, Ricketts North 1, 4 pm.Saturday/ March 31JUDO: Judo in Bartlett gym.DEBATE: Joe Morris and Mitchell Glass debate Dean JamesVice on the topic "RESOLVED: That justice may be blind butshe hasn't lost her sense of taste!" AUDIENCE PARTICIPATION ENCOURAGED!!! (Including hisses, boos,catcalls, etc in an open debate), Mandel Hall, 75« 9 pm.NOTE: Happy day before April Fool's Day.FILM: "Le Boucher," CEF, Cobb, highly recommended, $1,6:30, 8:30 and 10:30 pm. less would pay less. But there are limits to yourflexibility in a world which is occupied by state in¬stitutions which are all giving enormous scholarships,of course we do that, in that every student in theUniversity is receiving, whether he knows it or not, ascholarship.How do you find out what is going on three floorsbelow you? Is there communication between the firstfloor of the Administration building and the fifth floor,or the fifth floor and Cobb hall? Do you feel you have anadequate sense of what is going on in this Universityfrom a student's or faculty member’s point of view?Well, nobody knows what goes on in this University.The most important thing that is going on in thisUniversity today is that some scholar is discoveringsomething that won’t be known about for ten years,that is we are fortunate if that is the case. And if Ifound out about it it would very likely be in a fieldwhich I didn’t understand and I wouldn’t know if it wasimportant or not. Of course it’s difficult, it’s terriblydifficult to know what’s going on.I think there are several answers to your question.One is of course one really doesn’t know what is goingon, the second thing is perhaps it is a good thing thatone doesn’t, and because I don’t know what goes on onthe first floor and maybe it’s not terribly importantand it’s not a terribly good thing to fill one’s mind fullof unimportant things.The problem is how to have an ear or relationshipwhich tells you about the quality of the institution, thequality of instruction, the quality of the life which itmakes possible, the important mistakes which itmakes. Anyone who said he was fully informed onthose matters would be even more arrogant than I amSunday, April 1DAY: Today is you know what day. Watch it.MATCH: UC Rugby team boots away against Milwaukee,Stagg Field, starting sometime between 1 30 and 2 pm.HAVE A NASCH: Lox and bagel brunch, Hillel, $1, 11 am.MORE EATS: A mandarin Chinese dinner is served onceagain in a German named frat house. Huh? Actually, it's agood mandarin Chinese dinner at Bonhoeffer house, 5554 SWoodlawn, $1.25, 12:30 pm.DANCE: Intermediate folkdancing, Ida Noyes, 50c, 8 pm.MEETING: Jewish women's study group, Hillel house, 4pmSERVICE AND SERMON. "God's Whole Wheat Bread" istopic of the sermon by Rockefeller chapel Dean E SpencerParsons, 11 am.MEETING: Gay lib business meeting, Ida Noyes, 4 pm.CRUSADE: "Winning souls for Christ" with evangelist JGeorge Mills, St Stephen Church, 5640 S Blackstone, 7 pm.Through April 8th.CENTENNIAL SYMPOSIUM: "It's Our Business to BeBothered," a talk on poetry by Illinois poet laureateGwendolyn Brooks, will be the concluding part of the centennial celebration of the Chicago Public Library, broadcastover radio station WFMT at 8 pm.Monday, April 2RECITAL: The music society presents Ruth Edwardssinging Mozart's "Exultate Jubilee," Ida Noyes library, 8pm.EVENT: Judo at Bartlett gym, 6 pm.EVENT2: Karate at Ida Noyes, 6:30 pm.MEETING; Chess club, Ida Noyes, 7 pm.MORE DANCING: Beginning folkdancing, Ida Noyes, 50c, 8pm.SEMINAR: "On a statistical problem of E A Milne," profAgnes Herzberg of the Imperial College of London, Eck 202,4 pm.SEMINAR 2: "Spin orbit coupling and molecular wavefunction," Northwestern prof Timothy Walker, K 106, 4 pm.LECTURE: "The achievement of Ted Hughes," ManChester prof Keith Sagar, P 016, 4:30 pm.SEMINAR 3: "Molecular events during Oocytematuration," Purdue prof L Dennis Smith, Zoology 14, 4:30pm.DEMONSTRATION: Karate demonstration in conjunctionwith the class above, with an instructor from Japan, 7 pm.UNVIEW: The medium Newton Minow once called "a vastwasteland" is the object of a book called The TelevisionYears. And Nick Aronson casts a critical eye on the book onUC Review of the Arts, WHPK FM, 8 am and 8 pm.MEETING: IPIRG, Ida Noyes 217, 7:30 pm.LECTURE: "Continuity and change in the Balkans underthe Ottoman Empire," Halil Inalcik, PI 18, 4 pm.CALENDARNow Available:THE "YES" BOOKOF SEXA series of booklets designed by the National SexForum in San Francisco to provide realistic and ac¬curate sex information for the general public aswell as for professional counselors and students."You Can Last Longer" for men; and "Getting inTouch with Your Self" for women. Now availableat $2.95 each, plus 50* for postage/handling.MIDWEST ASSOCIATION FOR THESTUDY OF HUMAN SEXUALITY100 E. Ohio s«.Chicago 60611 Or Call 467-1290 A professionalABORTIONthat is safelegal &inexpensivecan be set up on anoutpatient basis by callingThe Problem PregnancyEducational Service, Inc.215-722-536024 hours-7 daysfor prote*»io..al. confidentialand caring halp. HEADQUARTERSFORPASSPORTPHOTOGRAPHSAPPLICATIONSPHOTOGRAPHSinblack & whiteand colorCall MU 4-7424 nowfor an appointmentCorona Studiosl 314 E. 53RD StudentDiscountModelCameral 342 E. 55th493-6700Most complete photoshop on South Side. Find us...(CERMAK)YOU'LL BEGLADYOU DID...EMIL MARESPONTIAC2232 BLUE ISLANDAVENUEIN CHICAGO254-29004-The Chicago Maroon-Friday, Morch 30,-1973rch crisis poses problems REE: aH the dope youlneed for a Europe hip.\ or more foolish than I am, but I think that one tries toaccomplish this by having a great many relationships,hearing a great deal, seeing a great deal, and trying toavoid a serious problem of believing that you’ve heardit all before. One of the problems of someone in thissituation is you may find yourself dealing instereotypes. You think a situation is the same as someprior situation only it really isn’t the same and it is todetect these differences and changes that one has totry to be alert.What is your evaluation of your participation in thecommon core humanities course which you arecurrently instructing?I learn a great deal from it. I learn a lot more from itthan I may realize during preparation for the class orthe hours in the class and certainly more than thestudents realize I get from it. I find it is the kind ofdiscipline which makes me think about things andwhen I start working on some other problem the in¬sights and the relearning which is going on is veryuseful to me.Secondly it reminds me, although I never reallyforgot, how difficult teaching is and the special agonyof realizing that one is not doing a very good job andthe delight which one has when you find a group ofstudents that are very alert and teach you quite a lot.Actually it just adds to my guilt feeling because Ifind that the function of the President of the Universityof Chicago, at least this president, is to feel guilty allthe time and to worry all the time. But generally Ithink an official worrier is probably a good thing.You mentioned in your February address to thefaculty that ‘the unity of teaching and research is afundamental principle of this University\ Do youthink that this institution now is at a point where itfaces a serious challenge to this unity and do you thinkthat there are perhaps certain academic or in¬tellectual disciplines especially susceptible tofragmenting instruction and research?Well I think that has always been the case, I don’tthink there is more of a crisis now than there alwayshas been. One does have to think about what onemeans by research. It used to be called investigation.Discovery is a better word. I mentioned the rewards ofteaching. I find that if I read with this small classvarious material from Plato, it reopens my eyes tothinking about pressing jurisprudential problemswhich as a trained scholar in that area I might nothave thought about. And therefore, when I say that theteaching is an adventure into discovery for me, wellI’m being realistic—it is. And since the material isquite difficult it should certainly be an adventure indiscovery for students alsoWhat I’m trying to say is we shouldn’t think ofresearch as just opinion polling, for example,gathering statistics or data. And we shouldn’t think ofit as solely occupied with the use of scientific in¬struments in the natural sciences or something of thatsort.I think that the point really is that this institution hasalways assumed that new insights are important if one is going to retain the old ones. Or, as Whitehead said,knowledge gets stale like stale fish, it has to be keptfresh for the purpose of good teaching and keeping itfresh means a new understanding of it. One can’t keepabreast of old learning unless there is new learning.It is true that in some areas of the University, and Iwould say that the Social Sciences would be one sucharea, there has been such fragmentation that you havea problem about the meaningfulness of research. Andif you have a problem with the meaningfulness ofresearch then you have a problem with themeaningfulness of instruction. This is an intellectualmatter. It has to do with what the lines of com¬munication are between the sub-disciplines.Do you feel that the ‘publication’ aspect of anevaluation of an instructor is being overemphasized?No, I don’t believe that. The University was perhapsamong the first to emphasize the importance ofpublication in the sense of setting forth new in¬terpretations, new knowledge. And I think it wasHarper who said that the University will be patient,but it does expect its faculty to contribute to newunderstanding and new knowledge, and that was to bethe kind of quality of this kind of institution. Now youcan have other institutions which are not like this atall.I think that every member of the faculty is probablycontinually torn between the various pressures putupon him or her. Writing and research are sometimespainful processes. I think the point to be made is thatthey are really an essential part of the teachingprocess and if one discovers something or gets a newunderstanding of something it really isn’t humannature not to want to tell somebody about it. And it isthe telling someone about which is the writing of it.Now it is true that occasionally you will get a facultymember who keeps fresh, has new ideas, is makingnew discoveries, and for some psychological reasondoesn’t want to put it down on paper. I think thequestion then to be asked is what happens to it? Does itcome out in the classes? Because if it does then all oneshould have to do is to have someone come in and takenotes.I do not think it is important for someone to list thearticles which one has written. I don’t think one shouldmeasure the status of a scholar by the number ofbooks. But all of us have to be measured by the abilityto push beyond, to see new things otherwise what willhappen is that you won’t be seeing the old things. Youwill become rigid, stereotyped, and dead.9 AM - « PM 7 Days A Wttk Pass the word SOFA car get you to EuropeAfrica. Israel the Far East or anywhereAND. get you back'As the wholly owned subsidiary oj •eleven non-profit European National#Student Travel Bureaus SOFA caniseue you the international Student f>|Identity Card and book you on any ofour 9.000 student charter flightswithin Europe. Asia and Africa'including Tel Aviv Bombay BangkrNairobi, etc ) Up to 70*/o savingsover normal fares aSOFA also offers an extensive |array of tours allowing the independent astudent traveller to take advantage of *inexpensive group arrangements and Asightseeing We feature culturallyrewarding Israel* kibbu»* programs andeducational tours within Europe and Rthe Soviet Union ™ Other services available from SOFA includea great Car Plan the Student Railpaas languagecourses m Europe and low cost accommodationsm hotels holiday villages, and hostelsAll the dope is m the FVICf 1973 OfficialStudent Travel Quide to EuropeSOFA - don't sit on it - Send tor it NOW□ SOFA please send me the FNff dope 9«NameAddress —StateCitySend to SOFA/European Student Travel Center Ltd136 Easi 57th Street Suite 1206New York N Y 10022Tel (212) PL 1-9000 ZipKIMBARKLIQUORSWINE MERCHANTSOF THE FINESTIMPORTED ANDDOMESTIC WINESFeaturing our direct imports,bringing better value to youlTHE ONLY TRUE WINE SHOP IN HYDE PARK53RD KIMBARK LIQUORS, INC.1214 E. 53rd St.53-Kimbark Plaza NY 3-3355THE FIRST IMPORTANT FILM OF 1973-AND POSSIBLY OF THE SEVENTIES!- Arthur Knight. Saturday Revtru‘“SAVE THE TIGER’ is a virtuosopiece of acting.” _. ®k,rtr Chicago Sun Times“JACK LEMMON IN HIS bestperformance since ‘Wine & Roses.’”—Mary Knoblauch Chicago TodayPARAMOUNT PICTURES CORPORATIONand F1LMWAYS. INC presentJACK LEMMONin A MARTIN RANSOHOFF Production“SAVE THE nGEFTc<> starring JACK GILFORD t wfuMPirxWnLCMiARDS flldmamand Introducing LAURIE HEJNEMAN Pwdu<«d bvSTEVA SHAGAN\Mrmrr, by STEVE SHAGAN Domed JOHN G AMLDSENReduced rate parkingat 2 E Oak StHYDE PARK PIPE AND TOBACCO SHOP,1552 E. 53rd - under 1C tracksAll students get 10% off/ask for "Big Jim"Pip*.Pipe Tobaccos Cigars A LANSBURY/DUNCAN/BERUH PRODUCTIONFROM COLUMBIA<V' B«>< aerorOs l^VMidwest PremiereWednesday, April 11 TUP ^squire The hitstageplay isnow onthescreen!Friday, March 30, 1973-the Chicago Maroon - 5Quality Componentsat the Right Price”bring you an hour ofQUADROPHONIC fDlSCS^y*^NEAR NORTH51 East Oak StreetChicago 60611 - 337-3296NEW TOWN2903 North BroadwayCmcago 60657 — 248-8910WEST SUBURBAN19 V.est 228 Lake Street -U.S. 20Addison 60' 31 - 543-9200SW SUBURBAN1626 Ogden Avenoe-U.S. 34Downers Grove 60515 -964-4550HOURS:Mon-Fri, 11am-9omSaturday. lOam-CpmSunday. 1pm 5pm PIZZAPLATTER1460 E. 53rdMl 3-2800i FAST DELIVERY! AND PICKUPELIZABETH GORDONHAIR DESIGNERS1 620 E. 53rd St.288-2900£***********&J (frutM 'pl&UAt £j$ 16451.55TH STREET J** CHICAGO, ILL. 60615 SJ Phone: FA 4-1651 ^************’1FIRST ANNUALHYDE PARKPHOTOCONTESTDEADLINEAPRIL 6CALL RICH AT753-3263FOR DETAILSREPRESENTATIVEMilWe re looking for part-timehelp to promote the campusmarket for film developingOur rep will distribute pro¬motional materials, posters,“free" processing coupons,etc No photo experiencenecessaryGood money-maker! Yourefforts backed by collegenewspaper ads Don t passthis one upMr Ron Tyler100 Summers StCoolville Ohio 45723Yes, send me the information.NameAddress"CityState Zipi College or Univ6-Tba Chicago Maroon-Friday, March 30,. 1973 Direct election askedcontinued from page twoprogram introduced last summer of sendingto every new student a synopsis of all thestudent organizations on campus, writtenand compiled by SG, will be carried outagain this year.To summarize: in those limited areaswhere SG was able to serve a function it wasuniquely suited for, its performance has notbeen lacking. Our budget was lower than anySG budget in the four years I have been at theUniversity and we are not headed for adeficit this year. Given properly formedexpectations of the rudimentary purposes ofSG, albeit - some neglect of its higherpromise, we have survived this year ratherwell. And, often in cases of civil strife such aswe encountered, that a government survivesat all is the most remarkable ac¬complishment imaginable.THE BADLest any reader now be shuddering at theprospect that I am kicking off a campaign forreelection, let me hasten to the second part ofthis essay, in which I find fault with SG.Firstly, I must regret that our membershipthis year did not include a type like mypredecessor-one constitutionally and in¬tellectually able to produce such a thing asthe Lascivious Costume Ball. Although wehave allocated seed money for anyonecapable of pulling off such a profitable ex¬travaganza this year (or any other social-cultural event ranking above the “sure-to-bomb” category), we have had no takers.Still, this is far preferable to a politicalassembly trying to undertake social func¬tions for which it is poorly suited.A much more serious flaw in the effectivefunctioning of SG this year, however, may bebrought to focus in the position of Presidentof student government. Despite whateverqualifications, preparations, or aspirationsone brings to the office, it is peculiarly illconstituted. The president should be adirector of policy; instead, he is condemnedto spending almost all of his time in the pettyarena of Assembly infighting.If the office were only a name, of course,there would be no harm involved. The sourceof concern from which I write, however, isthat the position does bestow a degree ofpower, which is hypocritical in view of thelegitimacy of the President’s title of campusrepresentative.When dealings with agencies and personsoutside of the university require a responsefrom “the student body,’’ they are directedto the President of Student Government.Accordingly, it was as chief representativeof the student body that I invited electioncommissioners onto the campus; “on behalfof the students of the University.” I invitedsome politicians to speak qnjiampus, and didnot invite others; “representing the voters ofour campus on a topic of concern to them” Ipolled all state legislators on 18-year oldrights; “reflecting the interest of our studentbody,” I invited representatives of CAP andother organizations to speak and solicitsupporters hereOn intra-university matters, the cataloguecontinues: an invitation to sit on FSACCSL,patronage in naming secretarial help (theAssembly only controls wages, not numbersor identities of employees), use of the let¬terhead and office, the initial screening ofother groups’ speaker requests-especiallyimportant due to SG’s unique exemptionfrom the ban on spending CORSO funds forpolitical purposes.The list is inexhaustible, covering topicsfrom the federal higher educationsassistance cuts to Ms Fredericka Blanker; issues on which I have represented thestudent body and, if the ideal alnoe is in¬sufficient to stir the reader, for which I haveexpended the reader’s funds.SG Presidents is, therefore, Student BodyPresident in every effective sense of theterm. Yet the claim to that title and itsprivileges flows most weakly, running backto the students through that shut-off valve oflegitimacy, the Assembly.The students elect the Assembly; theAssembly elects the President. Fine theory.Only those students caring to vote elect theAssembly, and the majority party thereelects the President. Acceptable com¬promise. Those who don’t vote deserve nobetter, and, as long as the Assembly remainsrepresentative, the President is not ahypocrite. Theese were the terms I accepteda year ago.But such a system forces the energies ofany conscientious President toward ensuringa representative Assembly. The momentthat is lost, any President acts out an odioussham.As a result, with the first meeting of theAssembly the autumn, my concern shifted tothe proper constitution of the Assembly. I amnot saying than an incredible assortment ofimaginative, new ideas would have won-drously sprung up had this not been the case;but it should be clear to any close observerthat SG was producing much more good andbad before the middle of autumn quarterthan thereafter.It was at that time that the freshmanelections dispute arose. The powers of thePresident and of all SG to act in the spheresoutlined above were grounded in thedemocracy of the legislature, and anAssembly with no representation for thefreshmen had very weak association with theconcept of democracy. This was poignantlyso in the present case, since the freshmenhad a voter turn-out proportionally fourtimes as large as the general election turn¬out last Spring. The freshmen wantedrepresentation. Thus, wiser politics to thecontrary, I directed my efforts inward to theAssembly, and the focus of SG activitybecame itself.At the end of eleven weeks of effort, twotrips to the SFA court, and my straining thelimits of Parliamentary law, the result wasfailure. The freshmen would have norepresentation; and too much time, hopeand credibility had been sacrificed. We mustnot allow this to recur.What I propose is to amend the Con¬stitution to elect the President directly by thestudent body. The voter turnout wouldcertainly be no lower it has been forgeneral Assembly elections, and the campusmedia could provide sufficient coverages ofthe candidates’ positions to allow ameaningful choice.Barring last minute politics (never a safeassumption), this amendment will appear ona referendum ballot at the same time as thegeneral assembly elections, during thirdweek. I urge you to support this proposal.The Assembly will always fight; but at leastcut free the executive from having toreferee. Let her/ him rise above thebickering or apathy which have alternatelycharacterized that body. Give the Presidenta constituency of the students, not of theAssembly. Where his constituency is, therealso will be his interests.I am asking you to relieve the Presidentfrom having to channel his energies dailyinto the simple justification of his position.The alternatives are either a continuation ofinternal strife, embroiling one who shouldrise above it; or a demogogue President whodoesn’t care whence come the powersexercised.ABOUT THE MIDWAYMurphy awardsApplications for the Henry Murphy andJane Morton awards for Winter quarter willbe ready to be picked up today by applicantsat the college aid office, 5737 S University,2nd floor, room 202. Application deadline isApril 11.Brooks lectureGwendolyn Brooks, Poet Laureate of theState of Illinois, will deliver a public lectureat the University on Thursday, April 5.The Pulitzer Prize-winning poet will ap¬pear at 8 pm in the auditorium of theUniversity’s Law School, 1111 East 60thStreet.Admission is open to the public withoutticket and without charge. Miss Brooks’appearance on campus will be sponsored bythe University’s Emily Talbot Fund,designed to bring outstanding women to thecampus, by the Zabel Lecture Fund of theUniversity’s department of english, and bythe University’s special program of lecturesand other events in the area of African andBlack American humanities.Miss Brooks will spend April 2 through 6 oncampus under the auspices of the TalbotFund, meeting informally with students inclassrooms and residence houses.Gwendolyn Brooks was born in Topeka,Kansas, but has spent most of her life inChicago. A graduate of Wilson JuniorCollege, she has written 11 books and editedtwo others.Craft lectureRobert Craft, internationally-acclaimedconductor and author, will speak at theUniversity at 8 p m Tuesday, April 10.Craft’s lecture, open to the public withoutticket and without charge, will be given inBreasted Hall of the University's OrientalInstitute, 1155 East 58th Street.Craft’s tojfic will be “The PreliminaryVersions of Stravinsky’s Les Noces,” Thelecture is being sponsored by the Univer¬sity’s William Vaughn Moody lecture seriescommittee and the department of music.Craft was long associated with the lateIgor Stravinsky (1882-1971), with whom hecollaborated on numerous projects, notablysix volumes of interviews: Conversationswith Igor Stravinsky (1959); Memories andCommentaries (1960); Expositions andDevelopments (1962); Dialogues and a Diary(1963); Themes and Episodes (1964); andRetrospectives and Conclusions (1966).His book, Stravinsky: Chronicle of aFriendship, was published last year, and abook of his critical writings and essays willappear this autumn.Craft, a graduate of the Juilliard School ofMusic, has conducted virtually all of theworld’s major orchestras, including theChicago Symphony, the New YorkPhilharmonic, the Cleveland Orchestra, theLos Angeles Philharmonic and the SanFrancisco Symphony.The University recently embarked on aneffort to raise funds in order to acquire themusical manuscripts, correspondence, andpersonal archives of Stravinsky, accordingto Robert Marshall, chairman of themusic department.Oral poetry“Poetry Out Loud”, an organizationdevoted to oral poetry, will give a per¬formance Friday, March 30, at 8:30 pm in theIda Noyes coffeehouse, Ida Noyes Library.“Poetry Out Loud” is a confederation ofpoets who are seeking to move away fromwritten poetry, and publish their work on aseries of LP records.They work spontaneously, and withoutwritten scripts. They have been reviewedand applauded by Rolling Stone magazineand Changes magazine. They will performthree sets, at 8:30, 9:30 and 10:30.Argonne changeThe University and the United Statesatomic energy commission (AEC) an¬nounced today that the Argonne cancerresearch hospital, operated by theUniversity under a contract with the com¬mission, has been renamed the FranklinMcLean Memorial research institute.Dr Alexander Gottschalk, director of theinstitute, stated, "1 here will be no change intj)e. financial .support or the direction of ourprograms. The name will honor one of the great teachers, administrators, and in¬vestigators in the University’s medicalheritage.”Dr Franklin McLean (1888-1968), aUniversity graduate (BS, 1907; MD, RushMedical College, 1910; MD, pharmacology,1912; PhD, physiology, 1915), became thefirst chairman of the newly-createddepartment of medicine at the University in1923.During the following five years, DrMcLean worked on the realization of theUniversity administration’s concept of a full¬time medical faculty. Dr McLean took anactive role in the building and shaping of theUniversity’s hospitals and clinics system,and became the first director of theUniversity clinics when they opened in 1927.The Franklin McLean Memorial researchinstitute forms part of the University’smedical center, facing S Ellis Ave at 59thStreet in the Hyde Park area of Chicago.Its origin, the Argonne cancer researchhospital, was in the US office of scientificresearch and development’s metallurgicallaboratory (later the Manhattan Project) atthe University.Ground was broken for the Argonne cancerresearch hospital on June 19, 1950. Thebuilding was officially opened in 1953. Since1950 the institution has operated under acontract with the AEC.The 58 scientist scholars who comprise theacademic staff of the Institute hold facultyappointments in various departments of thedivision of the biological sciences and thePritzker school of medicine.Meat madness“ ‘Women’s liberation’ is one of the biggestfactors contributing to the soaring prices ofmeat, especially the better cuts of beef,” aUniversity agricultural economist saidtoday.D Gale Johnson, a leading authority onfarm prices and former president of theAmerican Farm Economic Association, saysthat as more women enter the labor market,those who must also cook for a family areconstantly seeking ways to save time. Thehigher-priced cuts of beef, says Johnson,take the least amount of time to prepare.Coryequently, there has been an enormousincrease in demand for sirloin, T-bone, andporterhouse steaks.Johnson, who is professor in and chairmanof the University’s Department ofEconomics, says the meat-cost problem isnot confined to the U S. “World ’round,people are going off their rockers over beef! ”The growth of fast-service food franchiseshas created another area of gigantic beefconsumption, Johnson says. And Americansaren’t the only ones who are more thanwilling to leave the cooking to others. “Manybig-name hamburger and fries outlets arepopping up all over Western Europe.”To support his statement concerning theconsumer’s seemingly irrational craving forbeef, Johnson cites figures showing thatpeople ate 3 percent more beef in February,1973, than they did in that month a yearearlier. “People are serving 50 percent morebeef today than they were in 1960, but thepopulation has only risen 12-15 percent.”The rising cost of soybeans, a major sourceof livestock feed, also contributes to highmeat prices. The price of soybeans isdirectly attributable to bad weather duringthe past growing season and strong exportdemand, Johnson says.What can be done to get the prices down?“For families with annual incomes over$10,000, it would not be difficult to cut theirexpenditure for food by one-third. They couldsimply stop buying high-priced cuts of beefand other convenience foods, and turn toless-expensive, but equally nutritious items.It won’t take too much consumer resistanceto prices for there to bd an impact.”Families with incomes less than $10,000,says Johnson, tend to shun the more ex¬pensive cuts of meat anyway.Commenting on the effect of the recent US-Russian wheat deal on food prices. Johnsonsays it has not been significant. “The dealhas added about one cent to the cost of a loafof bread.”He agrees with other economists whopredict prices will begin to go downsometime next summer. This will be due, inlarge pari, he says, io an increase in ine beefsupply. Supplies of other meats will alsoincrease. lESSELSON’SFRESH FISH & SEAF<752-2870.752-8190.363-9186 -1340 E. 53rdKATSAfeOS p u a p m a < Y.«c• Complete Prescription Needs• Prompt Delivery Service1521 E. 53rd ST. Phone 288-8700152ROCKEFELLER MEMORIAL CHAPELFOURTH SUNDAY IN LENTApril 1,1973 11:00 A.M.E. SPENCER PARSONSDean of the Chapel"GOD’S WHOLE WHEAT BREAD”No Sunday Seminar during SPRING QuarterWORKSHOPSApril 4 & 11,4:00 - 6:00, "Seder Songs and Melodies."April 12,4:00 - 6:00, "History and Tradition."April 12,7:00 - 9:00, "The Making of a Seder.”RESERVE NOW FOR PASSOVER LUNCHES & SUPPERSPassover at HillelLunch, April 17-24,11:15 • 1:30Dinner, April 18 - 23,6:00 p.m.Deadline, April 6SEDER PLACEMENT WITH COMMUNITY FAMILIESContact Hillel by April 6PASSOVER SERVICESApril 17 & 18, A.M.PASSOVER SERVICESAPRIL 17 & 18, A.M.*!?efocove&eefo46/u6t*ea. ftyfoto/I couldn't get King Kong to give mea whirl. But when I turned on toAKadama Plum (the lip-smacking grapewine with the natural plum flavor) allthe College Men started turning on tome. Thank you. Akadama Plum, forturning the prom glom into the PeesAkadama PlumThe toast of the campusImported by Suntory International. Los Angeles. Calif.MATINEES TODAY & TOMORROW ONLY“★ ★ ★ ★ (highest rating) ‘Cries andWhispers’ is like no movie Ingmar Bergmanhas made before. It is hypnotic, disturbing,frightening. _R0ger Ebert, Sun-Times“The most tantalizingly subtle film I’ve seenof Bergman’s. An unforgettable experience.”—Mary Knoblauch, Chicago Today*occ* co« man presentsINGMAR BERGMAN'SCRESANDWHISPERSANfA'WO«lORflfASfPLAYBOYTHEATER204 N OM'bOrn • **<>«• 944 MM mFriday, March 30, 1973-The Chicago Maroon - 7THIS SATURDAY MAY BE YOUR LASTCHANCE TO RENT, WIN CERTIFICATEThese U. of C. people haverented at Lane VillageEast. They have also won$50 gift certificates atForm Coop Furniture. Youcan do both, too, but onlythrough Saturday. Fiftycertificates are now beingawarded to first renters;50 more will be given to university people who comein to our very last previewbreakfast bash this Satur¬day, March 31, and sub¬sequently rent. Remem¬ber, rents as low as $115monthly; great apart¬ments; campus bus ser¬vice. Come Saturday, orcall now for spring oc¬cupancy or later.RECOGNIZE ANYONE? COLLECTING $50 MERCHANDISE CERTIFICATES AT FORM COOP FURNITUREARE THESE UC PEOPLE:Nursing Student; Husband (not UC Graduate Student (left), Supervisor, UC Library UC Graduate Student, English,shown), History of Religions; Wife, UC MathematicsSecretaryUC Senior (left), U.S. History; UC Graduate Student, Philosophy of UC Secretary, Graduate School of BusinessHusband, UC Research Technician Education;Wife (not shown), Biology teacher.See you Saturday from 10 a.VillageEast 38 Sides AndFeatures To Match . to 3 p.m. at 47th & Dorchesteror call for more information.Ask for Chris, 624-4701.Draper & Kramer, Inc., Management Agents8-The Chicago Maroon-Friday, March 30, 1973ENTERTAINMENT AND THE ARTS22 Wavs to Spend Your MoneyAlice Cooper: See if you can pick him/ her/ it out of the crowd.By GAGE ANDREWSIt has been four weeks since the last Arts section ofthis paper, and there is technically no Arts section inthis issue. However, I realize that the first weeksimmediately after vacation are for some reason thetimes when students have the most money, and sincethere are four weeks of new releases (in addition to thefew which we didn’t get to last quarter), I decided thata capsule survey of recent records falls into thecategory of a public service. The fact that a recordreceives a short review here does not mean that it willnot get a longer review later — several releasesalmost demand this.I had intended to hold this article until it could runwith a short, muckraking report on how to avoidgetting ripped off while buying records — believe it ornot, it is possible to be (almost) satisfied with a recordstore. If you want to wait until next week to spend yourmoney in a place that has been scientificallyresearched, that’s your decision. As a last note,perhaps I’d better explain my musical tastes, since Iwrote all these myself (I was here over vacation, andThe Wailers, guys you wouldn’t want to meet in a darkalley unless they were singing Jamaican reggae. no one else was): I tend to favor instrumental linesand good lyrics above everything else, and am choosyabout rock in particular. I belong to the school thatsays it takes more than loud noise, inane lyrics and amillion fans to make a group good (though some havesucceeded despjte these handicaps). The reviews, in amuch abbreviated form, reflect my own tastes ex¬clusively.Fraster and de Bolt, With Pleasure, Columbia.Fraser and de Bolt’s first album was so difficult that itmade getting into Joni Mitchell seem like listening toDonny Osmond. It features very unusual melodies,intricate harmonies, and other things which meet withcritical (and not popular) approval. The second albumretains the best of their complexities, and is lessdemanding, more accessible. The best folksingingcouple around. A-The Byrds, The Best of. . ., Columbia. The Byrdsentered a nebulous period in their history about twoand half years ago, not releasing material that was ona par with Untitled and Sweetheart. This does a fairlyintelligent job of chronicling the best songs fromseveral disappointing albums. It makes one lp that isup to their early standards, but suffers by comparisonwith their new, the following. B +The Byrds, Asylum. The original Byrds got togetheragain for this album, and liked it so much they arediscussing doing another, and maybe a tour. It doesn’tmove into any new areas, and even maintains an auraof reflection by including songs by Joni Mitchell andNeil Young. They show the musical ability that hasbeen splintered into their multitude of individual ef¬forts; they make it all sound so easy, so nice, that it’shard to believe they ever broke up. A-Ellen Mcllwaine, We the People, Polydor. BonnieRaitt, move over. Mcllwaine has recorded her ownsongs here (versus her first lp, which had the songschosen for her), and they fit her sliding voice and herslide guitar very well. There is nothing here which isthe equal of her first Ip’s “Losing You,” but that isonly the first impression. B +Bruce Springsteen, Greetings from Ashbury Park,NJ, Columbia. Springsteen was widely hailed (in ads)as the replacement for Bob Dylan, supposedly withsome authority since the ads came from Dylan’s ownlabel. The imagery is very nice and very complicated,and it’s good to try my hand at it again; but it, or I, orthe times, have changed, and I now find the same sortof pleasure in doing the Sunday Times crossword. Itjust didn’t radicalize me. B-Donovan, Cosmic Wheels, Columbia. It’s been twoyears plus since Donovan released some material, andthis shows a maturation from being the most representative singer of the flawer generation. Thereis much less quaver in his voice, fewer strings, morebass, more forceful melodies. He sounds older andwiser, more rocking and less delicate; a thankfulmaturation. A-Allman Brothers Band, Beginnings, Atco. This is are-release of their first two albums, priced muchlower than buying the two separately. Definitely animportant retrospective; there is more power andgood music in their earlier, formative material than inmost groups new stuff. AJulian Bream and John Williams, Julian and John,RCA. This might appear to be a classical review, butthe guitar has become the instrument of interest tomost rock and folk fans. Julian and John are two of thegreatest virtuosos of classical guitar, playing piecesby Sor, Carulli, Granados, Ravel, and others. Theyeach have their own channel of the stereo recording;despite the atrocious quality of the physical disc, it isobvious that this is slightly more than an attempt tocash in on the guitar’s popularity. Downgraded(Continued on page 1 1)Little Feat have a recipe Jor extra-crispy DixieChicken.Friday, March 30, 1973- The Chicago Maroon - 9Field Work Doesn’t HelpBy PHYLLIS WILSONIf it’s mid-winter, and you’ve got theHyde Park blahs, maybe you’re lookingfor something weird to do. I suggest anexcursion to 5427 N. Clark for aPeruvian dinner at the Piqueorestaurant.They don’t give you a menu at Piqueo.Each night of the week they serve adifferent complete dinner, and whenyou’re seated the hostess explains toyou what the dinner of the evening willbe. You can call ahead and ask whatthey’re serving, but unless you’ve donefield work in Peru it probably won’tmean much. We decided to go un¬prepared and just flow with whateverhappened. And everything wasdelicious.We went on a Monday night and hadthe following five course dinner:escabiche, an appetizer salad of coldpoached fish in an oil and vinegar baseddressing, garnished with onion,tomatoes, and olive. Really good—the description doesn’t do it justice. Thenpapas rellenas, an unusual potatocroquette stuffed with beef, olives,raisins and spices, topped with sweetonion. Then a beef and vegetable soup,tasting very much like minestrone.Next the main dish, sauteed strips offilet mignon in a thin but delicioustomato and onion sauce, served withbuttered rice. Hot rolls, a strongPeruvian coffee, and a light flan ofcustard and caramel sauce also comewith the meal.The cooking was much more subtlethan we had expected, nothing hot orvery spicy. Although each dish wasuniquely tasty, there was a littlesameness to the basic ingredients ofbeef, onions and tomatoes. (With allthose onions, you’ll be grateful for thefree bowl of mints by the door.)Piqueo is a small, storefrontrestaurant with wood paneling, wroughtiron chandeliers and exquisite Peruvianrugs as wall hangings. There were onlya handful of customers the night wewere there, and the service was very attentive. Juana Asturrizaga, hostess,waitress, chef and co-owner, was happyto tell us what was in each dish—short ofdisclosing the secrets of her specialseasonings.Piqueo does not serve liquor andyou’re encouraged to bring your ownwine, which they open and serve foryou. A bottle of wine from Foremost orWalgreen’s can be a real savings overthe same bottle of wine bought in arestaurant, so this is a bargain aspect ofPiqueo.Unfortunately, the price of the meal isa standard $6.95. While this isreasonable for a five course dinner (onsome cosmic level), it’s a little steep fora student budget. But the cost is my onlyhesitation in recommending Piqueo, sokeep it in mind when your parents cometo town or that cousin who works for thegovernment wants to take you out on hisexpense account. It will make a veryspecial and unusual evening.There is one other way of bringingPiqueo in line with your budget, a waythat involves spending money to savemoney. A check for $10 to the In¬ ternational Visitors Center, 116 S.Michigan Avenue, Chicago 60603 willbring you a booklet of coupons good forhalf price dining at Piqueo and 19 otherethnic restaurants, plus discounts atfive purveyors of exotic foods.Some of these coupons involve *strange restrictions—e.g., good only fordinner on Wednesday or Thursday. Stillthey represent a tremendous value forthose of us who like to combine an un¬usual meal with a trip to a new part of thecity. We’ve used our coupon bookletthree times and saved $15, so thebooklet pays for itself quickly.If you’re encouraged by now to visitPiqueo, call ahead for reservations at769-0455. Then take Lake Shore Drive toFoster, 5200 N., go west ten blocks toClark and north two blocks to 5427. Orby public T, take your favorite means tothe Loop, pick up the #22 Clark bus on S.Dearborn and get off right by the door.The neighborhood is Andersonville,Swedish, and full of interesting shopwindows -- especially antiques andthrift stores. Have a good time.Old Town Players, 1718 N. North Park,A Doll’s House by H. Ibsen, Feb. 9-Apr.15, Fri. & Sat., 8:30, Sun. 7:30PM, $2.50,Reserv.: 645-0145.The Free Theatre, 3257 N. Sheffield,Antigone, a rock opera by WilliamRusso, Feb. 10-Mar. 30, Sat. 8, 10, Sun.8PM, FREE, Tel. 929-6920.The Company Theatre, 2020 N. Halsted,And Puppy Dog Tails by David Gaard,Feb. 9-Mar. 31, Fri.-Sun. 8:30PM, $3.50,Reserv: 588-1606.The Second City Players, 1616 N. WellsSt., Tippecanoe & DejaVu, Feb. 6-Indef.,Tues.-Thurs.9PM,Fri. 8:30,11PM,Sat. 8:30, 11, 1AM, Sun. 9PM, $3.25weekdays, $4.25 weekends, Reserv. 337-3992. Weekend performances sell outfast, so make reservations in advance.Modern Jazz Showcase appears to haveovercome its beginning financial dif¬ficulties and is consistently bringing thecity its best jazz performers. Don Byrdis holding court right now and flys thecoop Sunday night. Art Blakely isscheduled to open Wednesday, April 4,through Sunday night, April 8, and ifChicago is lucky, he’ll be doing one ofthe smoothest renditions of “A Night in Tunisia” ever heard. Three shows anight, at ten, midnight and 2 a.m.; fivedollars will get you in the door, unlessyou can show a student ID on Thurs¬days, in which case two bills gives youthe Open Sesame. Matinee on Sunday atsix. At 901 North Rush, downstairs inthe Happy Medium.Megan McDonough sings this weekendat the Quiet Knight and comedianRobert Klein keeps things hopping inbetween. Through Sunday, you’ll findthem at OK, near the Belmont “L.”Don McLean is highly recommended, inconcert at the Auditorium Theater onCongress Parkway, tonight at 8. Youmay still be able to get tickets.Wilderness Road, Bonnie Koloc and J.C.Hartsfield are not to be missed tonightat the Aragon, which has reopened andnow presents one concert a week onFriday nights. Lots of luck if you’rechoosing between this and theAmerican Pie Man.Miss Sarah Vaughn will be causingminor riots at Mister Kelley’s on RushStreet beginning this Monday, April 2,through April 15. Go see her even if youhave to hock your Spring Quartertextbooks to do it. An all-expenseevening is available through TICKETRON.Round Two of the Fight of the Year(Any Rock Group of your choice versusthe Chicago Amphitheater) is scheduledfor Monday, April 2 when Black Sab¬bath takes on the building that defeatedJethro Tull, the Grateful Dead, and countless others. Jeff Beck and RoyBuchanan, always intrepid, are in thewings for Round Three on Wednesday,April 4. Call the Amphitheater at 927-5580. Address is 4330 South Halsted, andwhat you have here if you’re without acar is a problem in transportation.Don McLean promisesTheater. a dynamite performance tonight at the AuditoriumPHOTOSTAMPSPH0T0STAMPS CAN BE USED TO PERSONALIZEYOUR STATIONARY, INVITATIONS, ANNOUNCEMENTS, ANDGREETING CARDS, GRADUATION ALBUMS, 6ET WELL CARDS, ETC.HIGH GLOSS PROFESSIONAL BLACK & WHITE PHOTOGRAPHS INSTAMP FORM, PERFORATED WITH GUMMED BACKS, JUST LIKEREGULAR POSTAGE STAMPS."ACTUAL SIZE"SEND ’2.50 (TAX INCLUDED) AND A BLACK & WHITE PICTURE, YOUGET 200 PHOTO STAMPS OF THE PICTURE YOU SEND (ONE PICTUREPER 200 STAMPS.)SPEED SERVICENO CHECKSMONEY ORDERSONLY. YOURPHOTO RETURNED ORDER YOUR PHOTOSTAMPS NOW ONLY$2.50 PER 200 MINIMUM, TAX INCLUDEDHELEN STRAYHAN P.O. BOX 7216 CHICAGO, ILL. 60680NAMESTREET,CITYSTATE ZIP. FIRST UNITARIAN CHURCHOFFERS SPRING CLASSES INHAINA YOGAYou don't have to be an Indian mystic to like HathaYoga. For modern Americans it's a great way to keepin shape without strain, to relax from the tensions ofurban life, and to push the world out of your mind fora while.Hatha Yoga is a very simple discipline for anyone,young or old, male or female. You'll learn a fewbreathing exercises that create energy at the sametime they put you in a relaxed state of mind. Andsome body postures that bring you overall body fit¬ness, including muscles, joints, lungs, circulation,even the endocrine system. You'll discover a methodof relaxation and sense withdrawal invented morethan 2,000 years ago that works wonders for fraz¬zled minds.Beginning classes start on Monday, April 2, at 7:15p.m., and Wednesday, April 4, at 5:30 p.m. In¬termediate classes for Yoga adepts will be held onMonday at 5:30, and Wednesday at 7:15. The price is$25 for 10 weeks or $40 if you want to come twice aweek. For more information call the church office atFA 4-4100 or instructor Jack Merring at 955-0936.FIRST UNITARIAN CHURCH5630 WOODLAWN AVENUE FA 4-410010-The Chicago Maroon-Friday, March 30, 1973A Spending Guide for the Affluent(Continued from page 9)essentially because of bad record quality, it gets a B-.Bill Quateman, Columbia. Chicago’s own new star,well-known, well-loved, well-recorded. With the highvoice, the catchy rhythms, and good promotions, hecould be as big a smash nationwide as he is in Chicago.The album is a perfect example of how to produce apop record, from engineering to the excellent albumcover. The music is essentially simplp, based onrepetition and chord patterns that don’t fit my definedtastes but caught me anyway. BWailers, Catch A Fire, Island. This is reggae(Jamaican) rock at its best. Highly infectious, withclearly defined and unusual rhythms, the Wailersmake the most foot tapping, finger-snapping musicaround. Hard to describe, hard to forget. B -|-Yoko Ono, Approximately Infinite Universe, Apple.Ms. Ono has it tough; John has just been told to leaveAmerica, she can’t find her daughter, and she’s awoman. The record reflects these facts, shows theirinfluences-to the degree that an honest review shouldappear where the editorial page of the paper ought tobe (if we had one). As a musical release, it is an utterand dismal failure, with further screeching,cacophony, and dissonance. D-Little Feat, Dixie Chicken, Warners. There has beenthis neato rocking single on the radio that makesColonel Sanders want to cover himself all over withfinger-lickin’-good something. It’s got BonniesBramlett and Raitt on back up, and a wicked bass beatthat is literally right out of the Mothers of Invention.The rest of the album doesn’t completely live up to thesingle, being less danceable and only partially suc¬cessful at musically cerebral satire. B-Move, Split Ends, United Artists. A re-release ofmost of the withdrawn Message to the Country, with afew singles thrown in. A critical blockbuster, it’sbasically a survey of the best traits of British musicfor the last seven years, superbly played. “Do Ya’’was voted best single in a British critic’s poll by anoverwhelming margin. Their best, and certainly verygood. A- Electric Light Orchestra, United Artists. This is anoff-shoot of the Move that got into classicalinstrumentation. It is the fabled merge of rock andclassical music, still biased towards rock, but moresuccessfully done than anything else I’ve heard. Thesplicing in of Beethoven cuts into “Roll OverBeethoven” goes beyond gimmick into sheer genius -new life and meaning for a great song. A-Larry Norman, Only Visiting This Planet, Verve.Thank God he’s only visiting (no pun intended; seefollowing). This is a superbly proficient example of theway excessive Christian devotion can affect the abilityof a performer. Christian good intentions ooze out ofevery groove - not a bad thing by definition, but here:ugh. D-Alice Cooper, Billion $$ Baby, Warners. Only amillion dollar baby on the day of release, but whoquibbles with a guy like Alice Cooper? Loud, leering,trying to be offensive but usually slipping into eitherbeing disgusting or inadequate. Alice just doesn’t dome like Edgar Winter does, but he won’t rub you thewrong way if you’ve liked him so far. Another dog inNick Mason of Pink Floyd. Bet you can’t guess whatinstrument he plays. the dog racing staples. B-Randy Edelman, Laughter and Tears, Lion (MGM).A folk singer who is above par. Good arrangementsand production save the poor playing on this album,but it’s organized around the lyrics, which sneakthrough the album’s effort to remain undistinguished.BElephant, Capitol. Ponderous, clumsy, and loud. DRick Wakeman, Six Wives of Henry the VIII, A&M.The keyboard man from Yes does six sets which bearlittle relation to the actual wives the songs are namedafter, but the keyboard work (organ, moog, etc.) isvery good, and a more than refreshing change fronjKeith Emerson. Not classical in style, but done withrestraint. B +Jo Jo Gunne, Bite Down Hard, Asylum. Clean,driving rock, without the sweat and hokum of manybands. The music isn’t for dancing, but not for sittingeither. Take J. Geils off your hi-fi and play this untilthe new Stones album comes out and dominates partymusic for the next six months. B +Dr. John, In the Right Place, Atco. The night tripperhas toned down to southern blues with a voo-doo beat(well. . .). At least he seems more restrained, moreinterested in playing. High in ability, with more than atouch of the Dr. John sound, I seem to hear the in¬fluence of the session work of “Mac Rebenak” withDavid Bromberg, Doug Sahm, etc. Still a winner.B +Pink Floyd, Dark Side of the Moon, Capitol. Stillspace music, they haven’t heard that coke andquaaludes are today’s drugs, not acid. However, ifyour head still isn’t on straight — very good thing inthis world — they will reach you. However, not up topar. B-Monty Python’s Previous Record, Buddah. TheWackiest, most Outrageous, Bizarre, Strange,Peculiar and What A Coincidence comedy album everto elude a grasping python, it will shock you intolethargy, flagellate you with quiz shows, ring bells inyour eyes, and give you amassage (New York style?)by the Swedish Prime Minister. ACAN YOU SEE THOSE ADMINISTRATIONMACHIAVELLI’S GETTING THEIRJUST DESSERTS?Jjer jWajeStp’si(ftoumunrntJAMES W. VICE, Prime Minister,Asst. Dean of StudentsCEDRIC L. CHERNICK, HomeSecretary, Asst. Vice Presidentfor Planning and Projects,Resident Head, Lower Rickert.on, Resolved HopaldepositionMITCHELL GLASS, Leader, H.M.Loyal Opposition, President,U.of C. Debating Society.JOSEPH A. MORRIS, ShadowMinister, News Editor, RAP.THAT JUSTICE MAY BE BLIND, BUT SHEHASN'T LOST HER SENSE OF TASTESaturday, 9:00 P.M.Mandel Hall 75* AdmissionVi of receipts go toMAROON MARATHONSUPPORT THE MARATHON WHILE VICIOUSLY ATTACKING PETTIFOGGERS!HECKLING IS WELCOME, INDEED REQUESTED!Only 3/i of a BUCK, a charitable contribution, AND, AND...A CHANCE TO HELP UNSTUFF SOME SHIRTS! S i The Whole Earth Catalogue calls it-"A masterpiece. If you don’t think you have any ques¬tions about your body, you’ll probably be surprised. And if you’relooking for a stronger, clearer sense of yourself as a woman, you’llbe satisfied.” —Diana Shugart, The Whole Earth CatalogueSaturday Review says-"It’s one of those rare books that trulymake a difference.WOMEN One wants to urge, cajole and plead withwomen — and men, too. most of themequally ignorant of the female body — toread it, study it. discuss it with friends, useit as a reference, and perhaps even lend itto a doctor.” —Genevieve Stuttaford.Saturday ReviewFirst prepared and published locally by TheBoston Women’s Health Book Collective.this great underground bestseller—now published for general dis-*tribution — covers such sub¬jects as anatomy, sexuality,birth control, abortion, nutri¬tion, exercise, childbearing,common medical problemsof women, and much, muchmore — all of it carefullyresearched, clearly illus¬trated and presentedfrom the women'spoint of view.OUR BODIES A BOOKBY ANDOURSELVES WOMENBy The Boston Women’s Health Book Collective rTouchstone paperback $2.95 • Simon and Schuster/ *Photo: Robert Parent i■Vjvav♦ I • Friday, March 30, 1973-The Chicago Maroon - 11RECORDSSteelyard BluesWarner Bros.(DS 2662)The record Steelyard Blues isacutally the soundtrack to a movie ofthe same name which is playing in allthose major cities where for somereason movies come out a couplemonths before they are heard of inChicago. Though the movie with JaneFonda and Donald Sutherland and thisalbum seem to be packaged, presentedand promoted as complete “light¬weights” in entertainment, the recorditself, if judged on the criteria of con¬sistency, musical skill, lyrical contentand quality of arrangement andengineering, serves as proof that acollection of fine artists who have beenobliged to be self-indulgent in puttingout their own solo albums, can combinetheir talents to put out a truly fine effortappealing to a wide audience from folkand country music to old rhythm andblues freaks, from parody to pathosfreaks, all with few compromises andmore continuity than most such efforts.The unusual assemblage of talentfrom the ranks of “old professionals” ofthe sixties, songs written, sung andplayed by Mike Bloomfield and NickGravenites on guitars and vocals finelyhoned by session experience, the meanand professional harmonica of PaulButterfield, and that Jug Band queen,Maria Muldaur, portraying her longneglected talent for bringing a woman’svoice to light blues, are all backed byexperienced session men which Warn¬er Bros, also brought together for thiseffort. These musicians make thehistoric step, albeit as a result of themovie soundtrack limitations ofswinging the creative pendulum back tothe short song - an original, unifiedstatement of a writer plaved as prearranged by experienced andblending musical skills.Remember when such radical groupsas The Doors defied the radio stations’limit of three minutes between com¬mercials and once in awhile at two inthe morning we would thrill to the“seven - minute version” of “Light MyFire,” if we didn’t fall asleep in themiddle of the jamming? And even assuch groups as the Allman Brothershave brought the long song to an artisticweaving of guitars and rhythms, can wereally remember too many of the twelveminute extravaganzas since the in¬terminable “AnaGodaDavida” thatwere justified in either personalmusical originality or material? Onecertainly has trouble keeping attentionon most of them, let alone dancing toone. So one especially welcomes thedistillation into tight and original songsof the skill of these artists, almost all ofwhom have developed exceptional skillfrom being faced with prevailing ethosof filling half or more of an album sidewith one song.And they have turned out to be fine,mellow, soft blues songs at variousspeeds of foot-stomping and knee¬slapping rhythms. The first side’s R&Bfeel, with such indicative titles as“Woman’s Love” and “Swing With It” isbroken by perhaps the best parody ofthe 1950’s slow romantic tune (since theNitty Gritty Dirt Band’s various ver¬sions of “Goodnight My Love”) entitled“My Bag” and characterized by thesinger stopping to talk sincerely to his“darling (wahoooh)” in the middle. Butthe second side is better with suchobvious humor and pathos combined insongs such as “Here I Come (There SheGoes).”Ultimately, however, the success ofthis album lies in the willingness of theartists to play together, subordinatingtheir considerable talents to the whole -iIiIiiilIiiiiiiiii!i\ THE MAROON MARATHON RUNS CONTINUOUSLY FROMFRIDA Y.MARCH 30 AT 7:00 p.m. TO SUNDAY. APRIL 1.11:00 p.m.OPEN CASTING forSamuel Beckett'sENDGAMEto be performed June 1.2, & 3Tryouts in Reynolds Club TheaterFri-Sat, March 30-31,2:00-6:00 PMActors, actresses, tech, personnel. TV camermen needed.L something rare in recent memory.Butterfield’s sure playing of his harp isaudible throughout because of finerecord engineering rather thanexhibitionism, and its blending with theincredible but subdued acoustic slideguitar and Maria’s vocal on “LonesomeStar Blues” is an unusual moment forany album, let alone one of our modernsoundtracks. Notable also and maybemost significantly is the re-emergence ofMaria Muldaur, whose clear, strongvoice has been remarkable for its ab¬sence since her (“lam a Woman”) dayswith the now-disbanded Jug Band ofJim Kweskin, which takes its place withthe Kingston Trio as one of the trueprecursors of modern folk singers.The possibility remains that you willnot be as ecstatic about this record as Iam. Since in Chicago, as in no othermajor city, records are still more ex¬pensive than movies, you will have achance to test drive the music from“Steelyard Blues’’ yourself at“discount,” now that the movie hasfinally hit town.—M. StrimlingOne Night StandNoel Paul Stookey(Warner Bros. BS 2674)There was a concert at Carnegie Halllast Dec. 19th; it signaled the farewell ofPaul (of Peter, Mary, etc.) and thearrival of Noel. By using his first name,Stookey hopes to make clear his breakwith the past; therefore, the concertwas half Paul’s farewell and half Noel’sintroduction.Paul’s farewell is highly emotionaland nostalgic. Richard Kniss, PPM’sbassist for years of tours, appeared tojoin Paul in a rendition of “DesertIsland”. The old songs - “The HouseSong”, “Hymn” - sounded more honestand vibrant sung by Paul alone than when performed by the trio. Even“Wedding Song” belongs to Paul, notNoel, and was infused with the nostalgicmagic as he sang it to Peter (whom itwas written for); Peter was finallyinduced to come out from the wings ofthe stage for “Weave Me the Sunshine”,which has lost its naivete and found itsplace as a joyous dirge.After the intermission, Noel cameback with an electric back up band andproceeded to indulge both hisreligious/moral side, and his sense ofhumor. The latter is wickedly apparenton “Where Do Songs Come From WhoLove the Girls”. There is an anti-scagsong which would be maudlin withoutrock backing; in general, things move alittle more on all the songs on this side.However, both the Paul and the Noelsides have Stookey’s consumate skill atrelating to audiences: it shines throughon both sides, creating a rare com¬bination of nostalgia and small insightsinto the present activities of a minorlegend. Also worth mentioning is arocking version of “Jingle Bells” whichis more enjoyable than any I’ve heard inten years.—Gage AndrewsIt’s Private TonightArthur Adams(Blue Thumb BTS-43)Do you like Bill Withers? If you do, Iguarantee you that you will love ArthurAdams after listening to this album.Adams’ style is in the category ofWithers’ older works-not folk mixedwith rock, but just good, old, regular,down-home music. However there isone thing that separates Arthur fromBill, and that is maturity. Musically,Arthur is a good guitarist with a fan¬tastic back-up, namely “The FunkyThumbs” (Phil Upchurch, WiltonFelder, Joe Sample, and Paul Hum-continued on page 13)CORSO CORNERThis evening, Friday, Mar. 30, the Coffee House presentsPOETRY OUT LOUDA group of poets who believe poetry should beheard and felt, not read. Tonight in Ida NoyesLibrary - 8:30, 9:30 and 10:30. Friendly atmosphereand goodies as usual.GAY LIBERATIONBusiness meeting 4 P.M. Sunday, April 2.U.C. Karate Club. Demonstration tonight (3/30)7 P.M. Ida Noyes Dance Room. Instructor from Japan.Beginners welcome.U of C Swim ClubWater polo - Monday A Friday 6:00 - 7:30 P.M.Boucher Hall, 915 E. 53rd St.Swimming - Daily 3:30 - 4:30 and 6:15 - 7:15Bartlett Pool.All swimmers and water polo players, regardless of age, sex or condition arewelcome.CHICAGO DEBATING SOCIETYParliamentary Debate TournamentMarch 30( 31, April 1.Friday Cobb 3-6; Saturday Cobb All Day;Sunday Cobb morning; Sunday Ida Noyes afternoon (semi-finals, finals)andSaturday evening, an open Parliamentary style debate(Audience participation welcomel)M. Glass and J. Morris J. Vice, Asst. Dean of StudentsU of C First Team C. Chernlck, Asst. V.P. for P. & P.,Res. Head, Lower RlckertMandel Hall Saturday evening at 9:30 P.M.on Resolved: That Justice May Be Blind But She Hasn't LostHer Sence Of Taste!Admission 75* (’/j of which goes to Marathon Baskatball Fund)A 2-The Chicago Maroon-Friday, March 30, 1973RECORDS(Continued from page ) 2)phrey). If that doesn’t give you an ideaof how good the music is, it might beadded that Arthur played back-up forClaudia Lennear’s album.It’s Arthur’s stylistic maturity thatappeals to me much more so than hismusical maturity. All of the songs onthe album were written and composedby him, but there is none of themonotony that sometimes arises withother artists. Each song is fresh andmeaningful with a feel of its own.Despite the individuality of the songs,Arthur’s mellow voice handles each onewith the same success. There issomething very soothing, relaxing, butnot depressing about his style and onceyou have listened to the album undersoft lights, with a bottle of wine or yourloved one by your side, you’ll knowexactly what I mean.The messages that the songs give arestraight to the point in a very real way.The frankness of the album is enough toattract all types of brothers-brown,blue, green eyes or otherwise. That is, ifthey can deal with a frank viewregarding love and life. If I had thespace to, I would give the lyrics of eachsong to show how together they are, but,alas, it must suffice for me to play a fewof the cuts on WHPK this comingTuesday at 7:30 A M. (provided I get onthe air). So tune on in and check out whyArthur Adams says it’s private tonight.—Juana J. SinclairStyxStyxWooden NickelNew, happy sounds are coming froman album with the ominous title Styx.The five versatile musicians who havetaken the same name prove thatalthough they are natives of the SecondCity, their command of the elements intoday’s music is oecond to none.Dennis DeYoung, who leads thevocals in their hit single, “Best Thing”laces every tune in the set with intricateand creative efforts on the organ andsynthesizer that would please KeithEmerson. Lead guitarist, JohnCurulski, wields his ax with the swift¬ness and precision that Eric Clapton hasmade famous. John Panozzo givesanother noteworthy performance. Hetantalizes the listener with percussionthat ranges from amazing solos tostirring dance beats.Although their work has traits verysimilar to other bands’, only a puristwould accuse Styx of being imitative orunoriginal. Those who appreciate rockfor the various emotions it evokes willcertainly be satisfied.—D. J. Styx II(Wooden Nickel WNS 1012)Styx is a local group. Their secondalbum, Styx II, is good rock and roll.They play rock for purists. The impactof rhythm and blues and country onrock can be detected in their music, butthey are more concerned with thespecial effect of rock and roll. Rock androll is music for the individual. Youdon’t necessarily dance with a partner;you just dance. Rock is ego-centric.Pure rock is written with the effect onthe individual in mind.The Styx II album concerns itselfmore with style than with form. Insteadof embellishing the form, Styx usesform as it sees fit. Instrumentationseems to have been arranged so as toafford a maximum of color. Rhythms “Earl of Roseland” is finely done. It isbalanced and therefore light. Thestylistic trick of ascending anddescending tones works well in thisnumber.It is a good album. It is rock and rollfor rock and rollers, not really goodmusic just a really good time.—Michael FranzenOne Sacred Chicken to GoImus in the Morning(RCA LSP-4819)There are two schools of thoughtabout comedy albums. One school willbuy most new releases in the genre andenthusiastically drag them out forparties anu ccifee kiatcnes even thoughthey have already spilled the contents totheir guests by giving a verbatimGeorge Burns and Jack Benny were the first recipients of the “Alice CooperLiving Legend Award.’’ Eat your heart out, Marlon.are picked up and dropped as the oc¬casion calls for it. This means thatinstead of a song with a stronglymemorable rhythm or melody, there isa song that evokes a certain emotion orfeeling in the individual.Their music is pragmatic. The lyricsand accompaniment serve a purpose; toprovide a certain reaction in thelistener. The song “Father O.S.A.” ispreluded by a transcription of J.S.Bach’s Fugue in G (The Little) whosechord structure served as a model for“Father”. In this particular song theeffect is laid thickly with the result ofappearing cluttered in parts. The vocalsin “Father” are the best on the album. recitation. The second school neverbuys comedy albums, because they areoften the houseguests of the first school.Very few albums are all good. OneSacred Chicken to Go has its share oflosers, but what is solid is very much so.It will also be original for the Midwestand (a sure sign of impending success)is promised to be condemned in theBible Belt. Those fortunate enough tofrequent the East Coast are alreadyfamiliar with WNBC’s obnoxiousmorning disc jockey Don Imus. His NewYork-based radio show, Imus in theMorning, features the contents of thisalbum when Imus is not busy playingSuper-Jock. Witness a cut called “FeminineForeplay” in which Imus asks insanefemale callers, “If you were out with abig-time rock-and-roll disc jockey, whatwould it take to get you to go all theway?” Most of these women seem tothink that “all the way” means a driveto Philadelphia. This is a cute cut toplay if you want to rib any d.j.’s of youracquaintance, but is otherwise good forone spin only.Most of the cuts are concerned withthe Right Reverend Billy Sol Hargis andhis First Church of the Gooey Death andDiscount House of Worship. These arethe good parts, and still funny after aplay and a replay or two. Parodies ofreligious rip-off operations includesketches about the First National Bankof Him (Save a nickel or a dime ... It’llbe in heaven when you arrive.);Hebrew Delight (One sacred chicken togo!/ One with a heavenly glow!/ Onethat’s delicious, one that’s religious,/ Sosacred it won’t dirty your dishes.);Hebrew National - The Wings of Him(Hi! I’m Mary ... Fly me to Him.); andthe Holyland Record Package (HearJoseph and the original Belmonts sing“I Should’ve Phoned Ahead). For acomedy album, you could do worse, andif you ever went to parochial school, thisis the perfect revenge.-Elizabeth RussoWay Down EastJukin’ Bone• RCA LSP-4768)Jukin’ Bone is notable for tworeasons. One is that it is as close as youcan come to being my home town band -only 45 miles away, from Pork Road.Skaneateles, NY. The other reason is aguitarist named Mark Doyle, whostands out like an inadvertent diamondnecklace in the original purchase ofManhattan.Doyle gets to stand back, bite his lip,and tear - but only on a mere four songsout of ten, and only parts of those. Theother people are barely competent andcompletely unimaginative. Doyle’splaying alone (on acoustic and slideguitars, and pianos) creates a few songsworth hearing, and one, “Can You FeelIt”, that makes me weep for the loss ofDuane. Available at Rose’s for $1.79 orwhatever, and probably worth thatmuch.—Gage AndrewsUNDER THE RAGTIME MOONIan Whitcomb(United Artists LA021-F)What is ragtime? Ragtime was once(Continued on page 14)CORNER OF HYDE PARK BLVD.& LAKE PARK AVE.IN THE VILLAGE CENTER(NEXT TO THE AAP)SERVING THE WORLD'SFINEST PANCAKESAll batter made from quality ingredient* blended into au¬thentic recipes that have been carefully collected anded from the very best of each country or area of origin.PANCAKES FROM THE WORLD OVERHOURS: 7:00 AM TO 9:00 P.M. 7 DAYS A WEEK1517 E. Hyde Park Blvd. Bring iton home.Visit theColonelYou can pick up Col. Sanders’ Kentucky Fried Chicken at:1513 E. HYDE PARK BLVD. All Vitamins20% OFFMtfFLBWLKlk!»HEALTH FOODSPlus these everyday pricesVitamin E d'alpha100 I.U. 250 caps2001 U 150 caps400 I.U 100 caps250 capsVitamin C 1000 mgs100 tabs SI 95250 tabs $4 40Vitamin C crystals5000 mgs per tsp1 kilo1 pound $325$3 75$4 95$1115$7 50$4 00Haipei in Hai pei Cou> i363 1600 BOOKSALEALL BOOKS75' 50' 25'REIDMICHENER5309 KIMBARKS6 PM to 12 PMEYE EXAMINATIONSFASHION EYEWEARCONTACT LENSESDR. KURT ROSENBAUMOptometrist(53 Kimbark Plata)1200 East 53rd StreetHYde-Po.k 3-8372Friday, March 30, 1973-The Chicago Maroon - 13RECORDS(Continued from page 13)described as syncopation gone crazy.Ragtime was also the first music to bebanned in Boston (and in the rest of thecountry) by The American Federationof Musicians. Ragtime had two countsagainst it. It got its start as programmusic on the madam’s piano in whorehouses around the turn of the century.Not only that, but the dances done toragtime were bacchanalian and slightlyerotic. It made the oldsters uneasy tosee their offspring doing the wildlysensuous cakewalk on the dance floor.It wasn’t too long before ragtimefound its way out of the saloons and intoTin Pan Alley. Ian Whitcomb hascollected some of the lesser known ragsin an album. The rags on “Underthe Ragtime Moon’’ have beenincluded on the album presumablybecause they are evidence to therelationship of ragtime to its descen¬dants, jazz and rock and because theyare indicative of their contemporaryculture.There are of course a few numbersthat could come from any time period.Schmaltz has no time limits. But thereare songs with allusions to presenthappenings. After the annexation ofHawaii several songs were writtenwhich told of Hawaii’s golden sands andromantic moon. Lyricists in particularhad a field day with moon, because of itsrhyme value (spoon, croon, June, etc.)Militant feminism received recognitionfrom the Alley with a song titled “TheDay That the Ladies Take Power.’’ Theversion of that song that appears on thisalbum is delightfully cynical. The maintheme of ragtime was hedonism.“Dance and Grow Thin” exhorted itslisteners to abandon obligation anddance in carefree romance. The war inEurope had a varied effect. “I Didn’tRaise MY Boy to Be A Soldier” and“When Alexander Takes His RagtimeBand to France” were both hits. Thebest cut on the album is “Le Temps duChiffon”. Under this rag you can hearembryonic jazz and a little bit of boogie.As ragtime this album is not verygood. It is a collection of mostlypopularized versions of hard corebrothel music. Its only value lies in itsproof that ragtime is the grandad ofmodern music which most of us knewalready.—Michael FranzenShawn PhillipsEveryone knows Shawn Phillips. He’sthe folk troubador who sing-says hisverses and then sings his choruses high(for a male) and without words. Facesis an anthology of his music from 1969 until 1972. In any anthology it is hard todescribe the album because the in¬dividual pieces are usually diverse. It iseasier to list the songs and describethem.“Landscape” is a softly sung, softlyplucked song done, of course, in the folkstyle characterized by Phillips.“ ‘L’ Ballade” is a song with a prettymelody, but the accompaniment is thebest part. The orchestra’s volumeswells, suggesting the ebb and flow ofemotions. Just when the chordalchanges become familiar, a rhythmicoddity in the winds or upper strings isthrown in. Occasional note clustersmake the orchestration unpredictable.Some of the rhythm figures aren’tresolved making the piece fresheverytime it is listened to.“Hey Miss Lonely” is a number thatthose who have heard Shawn Phillipslive will recognize. This is the type ofsong for performance in a small club,which is where Phillips does best.“Chorale” is a high-pitched, wor¬dless, monosyllabic number. It isShawn Phillips cutting loose and doing awhole song of choruses.The credits for “Parisien Plight II”include Phillips on guitar, Steve Wind-wood on organ, and Caleb Quayle onlead guitar. With references like thatsomething great might be expected.After a special effects beginning —gong, thunder, heartbeats, and animalnoise — disappointment is confirmed. Itis trite with telegraphed chords andpredictable lyrics and melody.“We” is very nice indeed. Phillips isat his most mellow' voice.Two of the songs show' the variety offolk. Both have an iambic rhythm.“Anello” is semi jazz-folk, and “I Tooka Walk” is semi blues-folk. Themelodies could be exchanged with achange in stylistic delivery. It is theaccompany w'hich makes the differencebetween the two of them. The same istrue for all of Phillips’ songs. They areall much alike save for the background.But it is the background that makes thesongs enjoyable.—Michael FranzenThanks I Needed ThatGlass House(Invictus ST - 9810)Remember the middle and late six¬ties? At the jaded old age of 21, I lookback on those days with special fond¬ness. I was ten pounds lighter, myproblems were minimal (could I affordthat new Yardley London LookEyeshadow with this week’s allowan¬ce? ) and my aspirations knew ab¬solutely no bounds (would I be the first -■ - 1 ■ “ 1woman Secretary General of the UnitedNations before or after I won thePulitzer Prize?) Those were theproverbial good old days, but for me,the fastest way to recall them is not oldprints of The Graduate, or my Mc¬Carthy buttons, or (God forbid) myBatman sunglasses. Just tune me in tosome Holland-Dozier-Holland and I’moff.Now, the three phenomenal songwrit¬ers who brought the Detroit sound to itspeak in the sixties are back. They are nolonger working for Berry Gordy Jr. onthe Motown label, but have moved toL.A. to write for Invictus Records, asubsidiary of Capitol. The result of thatchange is Thanks I Needed That. Thegroup, Glass House, is relativelyunimportant. It’s the sound that mat¬ters. A few concessions to changingtastes have been made on the albumcover - there’s a little blurb about theconcept of a glass house for heavily-aware, would-be philosophers, andthe group sports Afros rather than thestraightened, shellacked coifs of theSupremes. But otherwise, everything isright out of five years ago.Glass House seems to have nodiscernable style of its own, but it isquite adept at imitating a large varietyof Detroit’s greatest. The first cut on thealbum, V.I.P., sounds just like theMarvellettes. Horse and Rider is pureSupremes, back when they were Diana,Mary and Flo. Then, abra-cadabra, onthe next cut, they’re Martha and theVandellas. And on the second side, theyeven manage to come out sounding likePercy Sledge.How can you go wrong? If you are a,grad student/ professor/ classicalmusic devotee and know nothing aboutthe Detroit sound (to be distinguishedhere from the Memphis sound), you canacquire a smattering of soul and keepup with your undergraduate/ rock-minded friends. (Just strike your breastand sigh “Ah, Aretha!” as you play thethird cut on the second side and peoplewill think you know what you’re talkingabout.) If you are like me, the first inyour neighborhood to buy the Greatest64 Motown Original Hits album, and theproud owner of every 45 that Marvinand Tammy ever made, it’s just like OldHome Week. All in one album! Thanks,Glass House, I needed that.--Elizabeth RussoDion & the BelmontsReunion(Warner Brothers BS 2664)Maybe I shouldn’t be writing thisreview. After all, the only originalFifties material that I remember first¬hand is the few odd songs that my babysitters heard on “AmericanBandstand”. So I’m hardly an authorityin the field. Some folks who allegedlyare have told me that Reunion is asadly-lacking attempt to cash in on thecurrent Fifties revival. I humbly beg todisagree.Fie on you, Rock-and-roll purists!Dion and the Belmonts do an excellentjob in the face of three major obstacles.First, they deal successfully with theconcert situation (a 1972 performance inMadison Square Garden). Working inconcert is always more difficult thanrecording in a studio, and consumers ofconcert albums often forget this.Acoustics are different and there’s nochance for retakes—a fact that evenpost-performance studio remix can’talways remedy.Second, as Greg Shaw points out in arecent issue of Rolling Stone it is verytough for Fifties-style groups to comeup with authentic backing these days.Do you think this might make for somesort of difference in performancequality, r.-and-r. dilettantes? Does theorchestral output make any differenceto a Lyric Opera production? You haveyour answer.Third, 1972 just isn’t, and wasn’t, 1962.Dion DiMucci has matured as a per¬former, even though the only thing ofsubstance that we heard from him in theintervening ten years was “Abraham,Martin and John” in 1968. The Belmontshave gone their separate ways, too, andeven though Dion and the Belmontsmay feel more comfortable in this genreof musical expression than in any other,it’s simply unrealistic to expect them tobe just as they were in their heyday.The Louis Falco Dance Company hasa piece in its repertoire called Nostalgiain which a girl who throws herself toofar into the past is unable to appreciatethe present. The snobs who snicker atReunion seem to me to be on the vergeof the same thing. Dion and theBelmonts have put together an albumthat is recalling old times, notrecreating them. They sound likethey’re having a hell of a good time, andtheir listeners are too.That is a major reason why I like thisrecord so much. You don’t have to besolidly conversant with rock and roll toappreciate the sheer fun and energythat Dion and the Belmonts are of¬fering. You don’t have to rememberwhen your peers were dancing to“Teenager in Love”, “Ruby Baby”,“That’s My Desire”, “Where or When”,“Runaround Sue” and “Little Diane” toget off on them the second time around.This is a great listening experience forany time.—Elizabeth RussoC.E.F.CobbDON’T BE LEFT IN THE COLD!Why not spend your springbreak in an exciting exoticploce like Alcopulco, Nassou,Spain or London. Hobbitt In¬ternational, The Student-Teocher travel group hasweekly travel programsbeginning March I to al (theseplaces. The Price? We re glodyou asked! Only from $T99.Act now since spoce is limited.Call or write for our completelist of trovel offerings. 312-787-9240, Hobbitt In¬ternational, Oak A RushStreets, Chicago, IM. 60611. STUDENT-FACULTY PLANFLY-DRIVE^EUR0PE(C7t)Low youth fare V Vplus car for summerFor Free Folder write:Car-Tours in Europe, Inc.555 Fifth Ave,NY.10017/697-5800Departing on for daysO Student Q Teacher □ Lease □ Buy14-The Chicago Maroon-Friday, March 30, 1973 $|00LE BOUCHERSat. March 31 6:30,8:30,10:30INTRAS0NICMEDITATIONLecture byB.K. AVENELLFriday, March 307:3Q P.M.Blue Gargoyle-57th & UniversityFREE JAMESSCHULTZCLEANERSCUSTOM QU AUTYCLEANING10% student discount1363 E. 53rd St.752-6933 DR. A. ZIMBLERDR. M. MASLOVOptometristeye examinationscontact lensesin theNew Hyde ParkShopping Center1510 E. 55th St.363-6363 TAKCAM-Y&NCHINESE-AMERICANRESTAURANTSpecializing inCANTONESE ANDAMERICAN DISHESOPEN DAILY11 A.M. TO 8i30P.M.SUNDAYS AND HOLIDAYS12 TO 8130 P.M.Orders to toko out1318 East 63rd MU 4-1062 iMAROON CLASSIFIED ADSSCENESCourage, Heroism 8. the Holocaust:Jewish resistance 1648, 1794, 1943.Prof. Arcadius Kahan (Econ & Hist)at Hillel tonight at 8 30.KARATE DEMONSTRATION:Monday, 7 00p m., Ida Noyes. ClassesMonday & Friday. Instructor fromJapan. Beginners welcome.Join us for a memorable summerexperience Back packing andmountainclimbing excursions into thewildnerness areas of Utah andWyoming For details write P O. Box11658, SLC, Utah.Free swimming instruction for adults,Tuesdays, INH. 6:30to 7:30 p.m. Bringsuit, towel, cap. Begins 3/ 27SPACESTUDENT WANTS TO SUBLET APT.2 1/2 rms to 3 1/ 2 rms. FROM JUNE15 to SEPT. 15. WRITE R WESTON,105 W. 77th St. N.Y.C. Apt. IBCo op townhouse for sale: Near 55th &Blackstone; mod kit., Many appl. 4 Igebdrm, rec rm. Recently deco, pleasantplay area for children. Charmingatmos. Very congenial neighborsComfort plus convenience of excel,trans. Call owner for appt. 667 1995.Lge mod. 1 bdrm apt., hi rise bldg,many extras, a/ c, pool, lakeview.Excel trans, campus bus, avail May 1Call 324 428540% OFF•tTHE BOOK NOOK''Acrowfrom th*Co-Of('THIS WEEK INew DonwanNew Ruban and the Jets"DON’T BOTHER ME”Original CastTHE VERSAILLESS245 S. DORCHESTERMAY 1STLEASINGWeil maintained, securebuilding. Attractive 1V*and 2Vi room studios;furnished and un¬furnished; $117 to $169utilities included. Atcampus bus stop. Kitchenet apt w/ fireplace: for quietperson only. *144/ mo. call 643 0741Room available prvt path in 6 roomapt. 550/ mo. 53rd 8. Kenwood 363 74071 bdrm sublet to Sept. $100/ monthfresh paint. Don 955 0490ROOM WANTED: in student apt. ..near campus. ..for female studentoccupancy as soon as possible callShani 288 3706APT TO SUBLET JUNE TO SEPT30. Spacious, 2 bedrooms, Univ owned.$145/ mo. Just south of the Midway itssafer than you think. Call Barry orLavaun, 288 4234 aft. 6Roommate wanted for apartment inSouth Shore. $80.00 a month rent, ownbedroom. Call Mary at 947 5508 (days)or evenings at 493 3529.For Rent: one Ige rm in furn 4 rm apt.Very nearcampus (Bings 8i Lbry) toshare with couple (both grad stdnts atUC) $82.50/ mo. 241 7254FOR SALE: Jackson Park Highlands. Luxury 10 room brickhome on 50' x 135' lot with 2 cardetached garage. Six bedrooms (oneshelved for library) den on first,ultramodern kitchen, pan. rec. rm.with par, 3 fireplaces Excellent cond.Owner. 947 5509.DO YOU DESIRE A SUPERBHOME?Houses for Sale. Jackson ParkHighlands. 67th Street to 71st Street.Cregier to Euclid. Quite excellent foruniversity or college professors. Aunique community of professionalpeople, business people, and goodstaunch community minded people,contactJACKSON PARK HIGHLANDSASSOCIATION6907 South Constance Ave.MI3 8237FACULTY GOING ON SABBATICALResponsible Law Students will rent 8<care for your home or apartment.Currently doing this for familyreturning in summer. Ref. availableCall Mark 955 5834.Fm rmmte wntd to share large, sunnyapt nr lake $100/mon 955 1992 evesBlk. Professional Couple seeks 2bedroom apt. Lincoln Pk Hyde Pk.area June 1st. occ. 842 8080 eves.2 rooms for women students on thirdfloor of priv home Light cooking.Larger room (very large) $60/ mo.Smaller (still good sized) $50/ moWill exchange 1 month rent on oneroom during summer for taking careof house cats. Call Ms. Weiner 684 5076Eves 6 10 or weekends.CHICAGO BEACH HOTELBEAUTIFUL FURNISHED APARTMENTS. Near beach, parks, 1C.trains 11 min. to loop U of C anddowntown loop buses at door Modestdaily weekly monthly rates. 24 hrdesk Complete hotel services 5000 S.Cornell5405 S. Woodlawn 3 rms furn. Availnow 643 2760 or 5746 Mrs Green Live in Frederika's famous buildingNearby furn or unfurn 2 & 3 rm apts.for 1, 2, 3 people Refrig., stove, pvtbath, stm heat. Quiet, Sunny, ViewParking, trans, $120 00 up. Free Utils.Robinson, 6043 Woodlawn 955 9209 or127 2583. Short term lease or longerPEOPLE FOR SALEEXPERT SELECTRIC TYPINGmanuscripts, etc. Free pick up anddelivery. 374 0081Hefty Hauling Ltd. Light wt. haulsrates adjust.; Sherwin 493 8451Sitter avail aft Lab school hrs. CallMerrilyn 947 6218 or 752 1140Experienced manuscript typing onIBM Seiectric. 378 5774Like Julian Bream's music? ForCLASSIC GUITAR STUDY 262 4689Learn Russian from native teacher.Trial lesson no charge. 472 1420.Tax consultant will help prepare yourtax return Call 731 9636.Portraits 4 for $4 00 and up. MaynardStudio. 1459 E 53 2nd floor 643 4083PEOPLE WANTEDWANTED: Someone to coach me inprogramming PLATO IV (PLaza 28377)CREW WANTER: for racing 30ft.crusing class sailboat weekends thissummer Call Dick Fiedler 489 2700 or929 9011Spend August on Martha's Vineyard?Transport, room, beard, $15/ week inexchange babysitting two little girlsand some housework. Lots ofbeaching Call 624 8363Native Pakistani seeks colleague tocollaborate on writing a paper forjpossible publication on "Causes thatled to creation of Bangla Desh" Canfurnish sources in vernacular andliving arrangements for any researchdone in Pakistan. If interested respondto Box 103. The Maroon.Private room and bath in exchange forchildcare eves Call 955 0984 after 6P.M.Baby sitter needed in our homeFridays 8:30 4:30 Spring quart. 9557026Part time babysitter on weekdaymorns at our place. Call 667 8697Babysitter wanted spring quarterMon, Tues Th a m. 9:30 12or Tues Wed& Thur same hrs good pay nr campusCall 667 3716 or 753 2878.FOR SALEFENDER Musicmaster Cpre ebsmodel, cheap good, call Bill 241 6322Furniture, hsehold items, old phonorecords, reasonably priced SO 8 4861Corvair '65 Monza, auto, radialsgauges very clean $425 753 8526, 7212176'67 Chevelle Good condition $350 Call363 3044 EveningsPENTAX camera model Sla withSuper Takumar F2/ 55 lens new attached light meter $65, GRUNDIG amfm transistor 301 $18, RCA Victor 4track stereo tape recorder $25, Callafter 6 p m ES5 2073Colonial style dresser, matching bookcase and night stand, top quality B/ WTelevision Console. Other items. Call266 8986 eves 8, wkendsMOVING SALE Over 50,000 Textbooks. Old Editions and Remainders,50ceach; all Foreign Language Books,25c each. 6 days only ALL SALESFINAL Cash and Carry. April 2 toApril 7, 9 00 a m. to 5:00 p.m. Chandler's, Inc. Textbook DivisionWarehouse: 630 Davis St., Evanston,III. Enter via alley on South Side ofbuilding.Standard size crib & mattress $20,High chair $5, mesh side playpen $15;Bedroom set incldg double bed, walnutheadboard w, box spring & mattress,dresser, mirror attached, walnutcamode, and 2 bedroom lamps, all foronly $130 Call 955 6958 PASSOVERHillel is now taking reservations forPassover meals and Sederplacements. Deadline 4/ 6 Information on workshops, preparationfor the Seder, Haggadot for sale orloan available at Hillel 5715 WoodlawnRIDE WANTEDFrom Hyde Park to CIRCLE CAMPUS8 9 a.m. daily 684 3183HELP!THE MAROON needs a delivery manfor Tuesdays. The pay is good and thework not too hard. If you have a largecar or a small van or truck and fivehours free on Tuesday give us a call at753 3263. Ask for Rich.JEWISH WOMEN'SSTUDY GROUPFirst meeting Sun April 1 at 4 00 atHillel A new group for & by women todiscuss issues of women in Jewish life.Will include report on network conferenceNATURAL FOODSALECelebrate Spring with 10%off and ALLitems. Hyde Pk Health Foods 1360 E53GARAGE SPACEPrefer in Hyde Park for a motorcyclea big garage w/ small car would doCall Steve Room 215 363 9293SLEEP LABSUBJECTS WANTED FOR SLEEPSTUDIES BOTH GOOD AND POORSLEEPERS. FEMALES ONLY $10PER NIGHT APPLY IN PERSON TO5741 DREXEL ROOM 302, M F, 9 5only.ZEPHYRSAfter the faculty hobble off the court,see Hot Dog Edwards get trounced bythe Zephyrs. Watch Jimmy Clark sinkbrother Jerry "The Shark". 3 p.m UCFieldhouse.KARATEUC Karate Club welcomes beginners8, advanced students. DemonstrationMonday (4/ 2) 7 PM Ida Noyes.BROKEN BONES??Claffey, Sally, Hawkins, Moore,Larson and Turkington What chancedo the likes of Hass, McGraw, Stampf,have against such Brute Power???find out tomorrow at 2 pm UCFieldhouseFREE RECORDSWHPK record giveaway starts Mon88 3 FM Gimmie Sum.Allman Bros., J. Greils, Otis Redding,Les McCann and more. WHPK in theLanbee Dandt Memorial RecordGiveaway Starts Monday on WHPK88 3 FMTAI-CHI & KUNG-FUJoin us on Sun 7:00 pm Ida NoyesDance room. Tai chi Chuan ClubFACULTY BOMBERSMEET SPIRIT OFA.A. STAGGTomorrow see Ed "Elbows”Turkington battle Bill "The Thrill"Sims in the College faculty coachesgame 2 PM UC Fieldhouse. If youdon't like your dorm contract root forSims.DANCE CONCERTUC Dance Group in concert at MandelHall Saturday, Apr 7, 8 30, SundayApr 8, 2:30 Tickets at Ida Noyes 201Advance sales: 75c for students, $1 50gen adm At the door, $1 00 students,$2 00 gen adm 753 35/4MEAT BOYCOTT ATBLUE GARGOYLESupport the meat boycott, eat at theBlue Gargoyle a weet with no meatloaf, a cnance for a changeFA 4-0200 Mrs. GroakkundaLiniTOGASPRING QUARTER INSTRUCTIONBEGINS APRIL 2 - REYNOLDS CLUBSOUTH LOUNGE ••• 5 30-7=00 MONTHURS EVES-*- 18 CLASSES FOR »30.UP TO *10 REBATE, DEPENDING ONENROLLMENT • REGISTER lsr WEEKOF QUARTER IN S A OFFICE *3-3591IDA NOYES 209, BEFORE APRIL 6T HELPITHE MAROON needs a delivery man for Tuesdays.The pay is good and the work not too hard. If youhave a large car or a small van or truck and fivehours free on Tuesday give us a call at 753-3263. Askfor Rich. homemade vegetable soups, cheesesandwiches, meatless daily specials,etc Open for lunch 11:30-2:30, Dinnersserved 6:00 6 20 Monday Friday.LOX & BAGELSSunday, 11 AM at Hillel $1 25BACK RUB NIGHTFocus on studying the Downy Massagebook Blue Gargoyle 5655 UniversityFriday April 6 at 8 00 PMHOUSE EXCHANGEBrandeis professor coming to ChicagoSept. 1973 through June 1974 wishes toexchange houses with U of C profgoing on leave to Boston area Forinformation Call955 1699ENCOUNTERWORKSHOPINCOMMUNAL LIVINGMeet people seeking or now living incommunes. Experience how you interact in groups. Hear about openingsin urban and rural communes Explore alternatives to the r.uclar family.12 noon 5PM Saturday Apr 7 BlueGargoyle 5655 Univ. Bring your ownlunch and $1 contribution.ENDGAME TRYOUTSSamuel Beckett's play to be producedJune 1, 2, 3. Tryouts in R. C. theaterFri. Sat Mar 30 31, 2 6 PM Actorsactresses, tech, personel, TVcameramen.PARADISE LOSTParadise Lost will be open tonight 511:30 PM. After tonight we will be openweekdays from 11:30 A—11 30 PM,weekends from 5 11 30 PM !5< stillbuys a 16oz. coke, root beer or sprite(such a deal!)VIDEO FREAKSOr interested in getting into it;University Theatre is videotapingplays this quarter We need technicalpersonel, cameramen Call 753 3581 or493 1447EAT ME!Hi! I'm a Paradise Lost Pizza Eatme The only 14" pizza in Hyde Parkthat can be eaten for only $2 65 Antthis pizza isn't all bread and cheeseand doesn't last like aluminum foil.Available only at Paradise LostThurs Sun, 5 11PMHISTORYGRAD STUDENTSNominate yourself or another gradstudent for History Graduate Council.Forms in dept office until Apr. 6Election Apr 11 12 THEATREWORKSHOPSAdvanced Technical Workshops willbegin Tues April 3 at 6 30 ALSO basicworkshops from autumn will berepeated beginning April 5 at 6:30 ifenough people are interested Sign up3rd floor, RC, or call 753 3581TAP DANCEWORKSHOP10 Sat sessions for $10, payable firstlesson. Mar 31, Sign up 3rd floor RC orcall 753 3581GAY LIBERATIONConsicousness group tor Gay 8.Bisexual people Thursdays 7 30 IdaNoyes Business mfg this Sun 4 p.m,Ida Noyes Gay Coffee House Fri atGargoyle From now on most of ourannouncments will be in calendar 8,' ' COR SO Corner"LAND FOR SALEWild lands in Maine. Parcels 1 acre to1000 acres Much under $100/ acreSome near skiing & near oceanAcadia Agency, Milbridge, Maine,04658 (207) 546 7272TRAVELSPECIAL DISCOUNT FARES TOAND WITHIN EUROPE Travel5370!^* 544 State, Madison, WisconsinPERSONALSDeadline for Photo Contest is Apr 6FREE CAT gray, neutered, 3yr oldmale Very affectionate housekittyNeeds secure, loving home Call Barryor Lavaun 288 4234WRITERS WORKSHOP (PL 2 8377)We need people to play in the CoffeeHouse Call Debbie 753 3444 (DU)APORTIONS For free information andreferral, call AFP I O ,a nonprofitorganization at (202) 785 1077$50 REWARD for return of "P" coatwith name L Mee inside Sentimentalvalue Call 525 5854 after Apr 3rdLOST$50 REWARD for return of "P" coatwith name L Mee inside Sentimentalvalue Call 525 5854 after Apr 3rdSTUDY YOGASession Yoga Spring Quarter Healthunity, tranquility of body mind 8.spirit April 2 in Reynolds Club S.Lounge $30 for 18 classes (up to $10possible rebate) for Info & to sign upcall or visit Student Activities Office,Ida Noyes rm 209 or phone ext 3 3591.Asanas (hatha yoga postures)Pranayama (Breathing teach ) &Meditation included Sign up endsApril 6th. “We can sell yourco-op apartment!”call brokerWm. Waddington798-5700Factory AuthorizedDealerPLAY TENNIS6 indoor courts, 3 outdoor courtsPrivate & group lessons availableSouth Side Racket Club, 1401 E Sibley SAABVolkswagenSouth-Shore Inc.7234 S. Stony IslandBU 8-4900Danceby the University of ChicagoDance Groupdirected by EL VI MOORESaturday, April 7, 1973 8:30 P.M.Sunday,April 8, 1973 2:30 p.m.Mandel Hall, 57th Street andUniversityTICKETS (phone 753-3574)Advance Sales I 75* Studentsat IIda Noyes 201 I $ 1 50 General AdmissionI $1.00 Students^ At the Door I $2 00 General AdmissionI * Friday, March 30, 1973-The Chicago Maroon -15CANS $3**BUDWEISER Case of 24SCHLITZ Case of 24 $422MILLER Case of 24 $42*IMPORTED 6 PACKS AT DOMESTIC PRICESNO DEPOSIT BOTTLESGERMANYNORWAYHOLLANDU.S.A.YUGOSLAVIAJAMAICAAUSTRALIA BOCKRINGNESROYAL DUTCHTUBORGNIKSICKO PIVORED STRIPE (12%alcohol)SWAN OR TOOHEYS $|79$|45$|79$|49$375$2”$255INTERNATIONAL BEER SAMPLER24 Different Beers fromDifferent Countries no 95Daily; lftam-11 pm Sunday: Noon-9 pm Daily: 3 am-10 pm Sunday: Noon-9 pm 116-The Chicago Maroon-Friday, March 30, 1973